The Widow's Cruise (Nigel Strangeways, #13) by Nicholas Blake | Goodreads
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Nigel Strangeways #13

The Widow's Cruise

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“The only thing I have against cruise life,” said Clare, yawning again, “is that it’s turning us all into busybodies and gossips.”

Renowned sculptor, Clare Massinger, is in a bit of a creative slump. To provide a little inspiration, Nigel Strangeways books them a relaxing cruise on the Aegean Sea. Filled with Greek temples, swimming pools, and sandy beaches, this scenic vacation should be the perfect getaway. But when they meet the other passengers, Nigel and Clare realize the cruise may not be as peaceful as planned.

It seems everyone knows everyone else’s business: a schoolteacher recovering from a nervous breakdown is confronted by a former student; a scholar is embarrassed by a scornful reviewer; a seductive temptress is known to a Bishop, and, to top it off, two busybodies are keeping tabs on everyone.

As the passengers’ lives become increasingly intertwined, it seems a plot for revenge may be afloat. Amidst steamy assignations, false accusations, and suicide threats, Nigel’s holiday doesn’t last long, and he must take charge to uncover the truth before the passengers have something more disturbing to gossip about…

184 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1959

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About the author

Nicholas Blake

77 books69 followers
Nicholas Blake is the pseudonym of poet Cecil Day-Lewis C. Day Lewis, who was born in Ireland in 1904. He was the son of the Reverend Frank Cecil Day-Lewis and his wife Kathleen (nee Squires). His mother died in 1906, and he and his father moved to London, where he was brought up by his father with the help of an aunt.

He spent his holidays in Wexford and regarded himself very much as Anglo-Irish, although when the Republic of Ireland was declared in 1948 he chose British citizenship.

He was married twice, to Mary King in 1928 and to Jill Balcon in 1951, and during the 1940s he had a long love affair with novelist Rosamond Lehmann. He had four children from his two marriages, with actor Daniel Day-Lewis, documentary filmmaker and television chef Tamasin Day-Lewis and TV critic and writer Sean Day-Lewis being three of his children.

He began work as a schoolmaster, and during World War II he worked as a publications editor in the Ministry of Information. After the war he joined Chatto & Windus as a senior editor and director, and then in 1946 he began lecturing at Cambridge University. He later taught poetry at Oxford University, where he was Professor of Poetry from 1951-1956, and from 1962-1963 he was the Norton Professor at Harvard University.

But he was by then earning his living mainly from his writings, having had some poetry published in the late 1920s and early 1930s, and then in 1935 beginning his career as a thriller writer under the pseudonym of Nicholas Blake with 'A Question of Proof', which featured his amateur sleuth Nigel Strangeways, reputedly modelled on W H Auden. He continued the Strangeways series, which finally totalled 16 novels, ending with 'The Morning After Death' in 1966. He also wrote four detective novels which did not feature Strangeways.

He continued to write poetry and became Poet Laureate in 1968, a post he held until his death in 1972. He was also awarded the CBE.

He died from pancreatic cancer on 22 May 1972 at the Hertfordshire home of Kingsley Amis and Elizabeth Jane Howard, where he and his wife were staying. He is buried in Stinsford churchyard, close to the grave of one of his heroes, Thomas Hardy, something that he had arranged before his death.

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5 stars
34 (15%)
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93 (41%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 39 reviews
Profile Image for Susan.
2,822 reviews585 followers
May 17, 2020
This is the thirteenth in the Nigel Strangeways series, written by Nicholas Blake, a pseudonym for Cecil Day-Lewis. I am sad that I am coming towards the end of these books now, as I have enjoyed most of the books – especially those at the beginning, and end, of the series (admittedly, there was a bit of a dip in the middle, but Blake seems to have got a second wind around this period; this particular book was published in 1959.

Strangeways goes on a Greek cruise with sculptor, Clare Massinger. Of course, there are mixed group of passengers, all with their secrets and motives for murder. From the beginning, you feel that Nigel Strangeways suspects something will go wrong and, indeed, murder does seem to follow him about. I liked the cruise setting and the interplay between those on board – from a rather overly curious child, to a bullying ex-schoolmistress and a Greek expert humiliated by a passenger during a lecture. Of course, Strangeways solves the crime, but the journey is very enjoyable.


Profile Image for Anna Catharina.
577 reviews53 followers
April 8, 2024
Das Buch erinnerte mich an einige Poirot-Bücher. Auch wenn ich die Auflösung wusste, hätte mich der Autor am Ende fast mit seiner Finte reingelegt. Sehr klassischer Whodunnit und ein kurzweiliges Lesevergnügen. Innerhalb weniger Stunden war ich durch und habe mich nie gelangweilt.
Profile Image for Jameson.
862 reviews12 followers
September 8, 2016
I'd been wanting to read a Nicholas Blake mystery for a while and, since I have a soft spot for whodunits set onboard ships, I started with The Widow's Cruise.

The book is very well written, the prose is poetic in places but not purply, it's not as G-rated as a lot of cozy mysteries which I appreciate, and Nigel is interesting and likeable. Blake's writing is like a smarter version of Agatha Christie's in a lot of ways, and so is his plotting*.

I flew through this book today but I have to give it a 3 because of the following hint of a spoiler. I just can't really rate a mystery fairly if I have figured it out 1/4th into the book, especially if I figured it out simply for recognizing a more popular writer's famous plot.

But the bottom line is I recommend the book and I can't wait to pick up the other 15 Nigel Strangeways books.

*SPOILER: Any Agatha fan will suss out whodunit by page 40 or so. There's a lot of evil under the Greek sun, if you catch my drift. I think Blake also riffs Strangers on a Train in another book so maybe he lifts plots a lot? I will update this review after I've read some more Blake.

PS Why doesn't Daniel Day Lewis get cracking on some Nigel Strangeways films???

PPS Keep your dictionary handy. Every few pages Blake breaks out a ten dollar word, which I find belletristic and not rebarbative.
Profile Image for Jon.
1,366 reviews
January 2, 2013
The second of the two Nicholas Blake (actually the poet C. Day Lewis) mysteries I've read over the past week. This one is apparently typical of the series in that it is a straight mystery, set around 1960 on a cruise ship in the Mediterranean. I had hoped for a good deal more classical allusion from the translator of Virgil, but at least there was some; I had also hoped for more description of the Greek islands, but I had to be satisfied with relatively little. The plot involves a wildly implausible set of circumstances, and the solution is equally implausible; but the author so completely accounts for and explains away all the unbelievable aspects, that you have to admire his ingenuity. And meanwhile he writes with a poet's precision and respect for words. I'll be reading more of these.
Profile Image for Anett Heincke.
116 reviews2 followers
March 11, 2024
Zusammen mit ihrem Partner, dem Meisterdetektiv Nigel Strangeways begibt sich die Bildhauerin Clare Massinger auf eine Kreuzfahrt in die Ägäis. Sie will sich inspirieren lassen, um ihre kreative Flaute zu überwinden. Schon zu Beginn wird ihnen klar, dass es keine normale Kreuzfahrt werden wird. An Bord sind verschiedene Personen, von denen sich einige zu kennen scheinen.
Im ersten Teil des Buches werden die Mitreisenden vorgestellt. Da gibt es ein neugieriges Kind, welches die Passagiere beobachtet, ausfragt und alles notiert, ein Wichtigtuer, eine unscheinbare Lehrerin mit ihrer verwitweten Schwester, ein Zwillingspärchen, welches ihre ehemalige Lehrerin hasst, einen Dozenten, der von der Lehrerin gehasst wird und sogar einen Bischof mit seiner Frau. Schnell ist ein Hassobjekt zu erkennen und nach und nach spitzt sich die Situation unter einigen Passagieren immer mehr zu bis es zum Mord kommt. Es soll auch nicht bei dem einem bleiben.
Sofort ist Nigel in seinem Element und will den Fall abschließen, bevor das Schiff in Athen anlegt. In guter alter Hercule-Piorot-Manier begibt er sich auf Spurensuche und setzt in akribischer Arbeit die einzelnen Teile zusammen.
Mir hat das Buch sehr gut gefallen. Bis zum Mord dauert es zwar eine ganze Weile, trotzdem war es nie langweilig. Es war interessant, das Zusammenspiel der unterschiedlichen Personen zu beobachten und seine eigenen Schlüsse zu ziehen. Die Eigenschaften der Charaktere sind sehr gut herausgearbeitet und authentisch dargestellt. Auch die Aufklärung war schlüssig.
Das Cover ist sehr schön und passt zur Handlung.
Profile Image for Pamela.
1,452 reviews
May 22, 2020
Nigel Strangeways and his partner Clare Massinger take a cruise around the Greek Islands. They spend some time observing the other passengers and realise there are tensions among them. Cantankerous schoolteacher Ianthe Ambrose is conducting a feud with onboard lecturer Jeremy Street, her glamorous sister Melissa has gathered a pair of admirers, and a precocious schoolgirl is spying on her fellow passengers.

The tension heightens as the cruise continues, until finally murder is committed. Strangeways investigates as the cruise ship heads towards the Greek mainland.

This is an interesting and well thought out murder mystery, the clues are skilfully inserted throughout the novel for those sharp enough to see them and the tension on board deck feels real. The characters are clearly distinguished from each other, as always in GA mysteries there is an element of caricature (the naive schoolboy, the rotter) but not enough to make the story ridiculous or the characters unconvincing.

Strangeways is likeable and intelligent, with a touch of vanity that makes him more human than many detectives. Blake occasionally shows flashes of the grumpiness, even misogyny, that marred some of the more recent Books, but on the whole this is a return to the style of his more enjoyable earlier Books, and I thoroughly enjoyed it.
Profile Image for Vanessa.
613 reviews8 followers
March 21, 2018
A shipboard mystery in the vein of Death on the Nile, but with a lot more focus on interpersonal behavior and not so much on timetables and drawing a map of the ship. No one is pleasant, really, in this cast, which is okay by me but may annoy readers who need a little more investment in the murderer/victim/suspects. A definite recommend, especially because of the descriptions of summertime Greece during this rainy, grey "spring" 2018 has decided to hand us.

I received an ecopy from the publishers and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Bill.
335 reviews
February 5, 2018
Deserves to be among Classic Cruise Mysteries

The Widow’s Cruise compares favorably to other classic mysteries set on cruise ships such as Agatha Christie’s Death on the Nile and Eric Ambler’s Journey to Fear. The closed society with it’s limited suspects and simmering tensions among a few characters thrown together is a standard Golden Age ploy but Nicolas Blake (the poet C.Day Lewis) uses it to create an interesting group of literate and academic passengers, allowing us to see a bygone world of English public schools with it’s literate professors and students struggling with jealousies and resentment. Strangeways is a less outlandish detective than some other series (such as Poirot and Lord Peter Wimsey - both of whom I like but are often characterized by their eccentricities) and while I was somewhat troubled that his loose connection to Scotland Yard seemed to give him incredible power and authority, he is presented as a quite regular guy. In these days of so many historical mysteries, it’s good to read a mystery from an earlier time that presents characters accurately as they are seen at the time. The book is frank about sexuality and is presents it’s non-English characters with respect and lacks the Imperialist posturings of so many “historical mysteries” trying to set the record straight. And while it is not that hard to figure out the solution, it is still fun to follow along with Nigel and see how he solves and presents the mystery.
Profile Image for Scilla.
1,816 reviews
February 7, 2018
Well done mystery! Nigel Strangeways, with Scotland Yard, and Clare, a sculptures and Novel's girlfriend, go on a cruise of the Greek Islands out of Athens. Early on they meet some of the passengers and worry what will happen. There are some very interesting characters. A schoolgirl, Faith, recognizes the Bross, Miss Ambrose, a former schoolmaster, who had caused Faith to be expelled. Smith's twin brother is trying to make Iantha Ambross retract her accusations. Anthea is accompanied by her sexy sister Mrs. Melissa Blaydon. The way too friendly Bentinck-Jones is trying to learn too much about his shipmates. The young daughter of two psychiatrists promised Chalmers, is snooping while carrying around a notebook to record private conversations, learning too much for her own good. The supposed expert on Greece is very pompous and bristles at Ianthe's correction in his lectures (as well as bad reviews of his translations). Something is bound to happen, and does. First Primrose is found strangled in the pool, and then Ianthe is missing, later found dead. Nigel must solve everything before the ship returns to Athens and the Greek police. The reader is in suspense to the very end when Nigel comes up with a clever trick.
Profile Image for Deb.
521 reviews4 followers
July 10, 2022
Island-hopping across the Adriatic to help his significant other, sculptor Clare Massinger, find new inspiration, Nigel Strangeways finds the other passengers a curious group. Chief among them are two unlikely sisters, one a good-hearted sexpot, the other a former teacher recovering from a breakdown. Also on board: one of the teacher's former students and her brother; a notable lecturer on Greek history (who regards said teacher as a Nemesis); and a seedy fellow whom Nigel suspects of being some sort of confidence trickster. Then there's the snoopy child of two psychologists, who frequently turns up exactly where she's least wanted, taking notes.
When two deaths occur on a single night, Nigel believes they must be connected, and that there must be a single murderer. But what motive could the killer have to kill two such different people? Nigel proceeds to puzzle out the tangled threads of the passenger connections to arrive at one of Nicholas Blake's more interesting mystery solutions.
I re-read this in The Nicholas Blake Treasury Vol. 4.
Profile Image for Damaskcat.
1,782 reviews4 followers
December 29, 2016
Nigel Strangeways books a cruise to the Greek Islands with sculptor Claire Massinger only to find himself involved with a group of people who seem to have a lot of secrets between them. Some of them seem to know each other but don't want to admit it. It is a classic scenario for murder to take place and it will keep the reader guessing.

I enjoyed the cruise background to this story and as ever Nicholas Blake makes the characters believable and interesting. There are plenty of clues to keep the reader trying to fit everything together. The murder doesn't happen until half way through the book so if you prefer books where the murder takes place near the beginning you won't like the scene setting.

The book is well written as are all Nicholas Blake's Nigel Strangeways series. The series can be read in any order though if you want to read them in the order in which they were published then this is number thirteen.
Profile Image for Luis Minski.
294 reviews6 followers
December 8, 2023
Publicada en 1959, esta nueva entrega de la saga protagonizada por Nigel Strangeways nos presenta al detective que, mientras realiza un crucero por las islas griegas, debe resolver un asesinato, y lo que se presume es otro.
Entre idílicos paisajes y múltiples referencias a la cultura de la antigua Grecia, se va desarrollando, entonces una trama de misterio al estilo tradicional.
Blake maneja con maestría la ironía tanto para describir personajes y situaciones como en los diálogos y contrapuntos entre los protagonistas.
Por momentos entretenida, por momentos con un ritmo más lento; nos encontramos además con personajes estereotipados, que, sin embargo, son funcionales a la trama.
Por último, cabe mencionar que las numerosas referencias culturales y mitológicas sirven para ambientar el relato, pero , quizás, pueden resultar un tanto abrumadoras para aquellos lectores que tienen desconocimiento o falta de interés en la antigüedad griega.
60 reviews
March 18, 2024
I enjoyed this, but it's a carbon-copy of Christianna Brand's earlier novel 'Tour de Force'; the same plot and resolution and the same characters (with different names)! IE; the two female cousins, one a peacock and the other drab, the philandering, disabled war-hero husband and his long-suffering wife, the flamboyantly gay designer, etc. It's so similar I'm surprised there wasn't a civil court action!
58 reviews8 followers
February 3, 2018
Charming in the classic British style; even moving the action to Greece doesn't change the traditional structure. Blake's novels are always more about the people than any forensic investigation. The solution is foreshadowed almost from the start, which doesn't take any joy away from seeing how they get there. Tricky, intellectual & great fun.
Profile Image for Sandy.
999 reviews7 followers
May 17, 2020
This may be my favorite in the series yet. An interesting cast of characters that can be found in any tour group: the slightly shifty guide, nosy busybody, whinny teenagers, obnoxious child with indulgent parents, pompous lecturer, femme fatale, and kindly vicar. Add our heroes, the well-known detective and his artist girlfriend, and the murderer doesn't have a chance.
Profile Image for Pat.
265 reviews
January 26, 2022
ok. but the characters were all odd.

I’ve never been on such a cruise so perhaps I’m wrong. But for example the two sisters being so opposite didn’t altogether make sense. The bishop having such a busybody nasty gossip of a wife seemed unlikely. But I read it through so it gets a three and I’m willing to try another.
Profile Image for Lorraine Petkus.
226 reviews3 followers
March 27, 2018
A golden age mystery taking place during a cruise around Greece and peopled with lots of quirky passengers, with a murder and ?suicide that the great Strangeway has to resolve with a great ending denouncement. Not the best Strangeway but an enjoyable read. On to the next.
Profile Image for Annarella.
13.2k reviews143 followers
May 5, 2018
I could write the same review for all Nicholas Blake mysteries: they are well written, there's an interesting plot and they keep you guessing till the end.
Strongly recommended.
Many thanks to Ipso Books and Netgalley
Profile Image for Robyn.
1,840 reviews
September 17, 2019
Kindle Unlimited Free Trial | If I hadn't known from the very beginning --long before anyone was killed--exactly how it would all end up, I'd have enjoyed this a lot more. But Agatha Christie wrote this plot in 1932, which made it very transparent for me.
Profile Image for Richard.
573 reviews1 follower
February 8, 2020
This was a very enjoyable read that I finished shortly after we arrived on board for the start of our cruise. This was a Nigel Strangeways novel, set on a cruise of the Greek Islands, about two sisters.
399 reviews4 followers
September 28, 2018
This is a late Nigel Strangeway mystery, published in 1959. The title is telling with an interesting twist. The plot is decent and the denouement is quite well done and was a surprise to me.
205 reviews1 follower
December 14, 2022
My first NIgel Strangeway book. I enjoyed this book. Good succinct writer and great character development.
14 reviews
May 11, 2024
Who the hell kills their sister naked?! :D
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Gypsi.
794 reviews2 followers
August 4, 2021
While on a cruise, Nigel Strangeways investigates a death that could be suicide or murder. It's quite well-written and very enjoyable. I knew the solution early on, though, but that was not the fault of the author: it's simply that in all my years of reading mysteries, I had already encountered the situation.
Profile Image for AnneMayaJannika.
177 reviews
May 9, 2024
Mord an Bord
«Mein Name ist Nikolaides. Ich bin ihr Kreuzfahrtmanager. Willkommen, meine Damen und Herren, in Griechenland und auf der Menelaos. Ich hoffe, Sie werden alle eine wunderschöne Kreuzfahrt haben»
(Zitat S.25)

Nigel Strangeways macht mit seiner Freundin Clare Massinger Urlaub auf einem Kreuzfahrtschiff, welches durch die Ägäis fährt und die Sehenswürdigkeiten auf den Inseln ansteuert. Clare hat ein künstlerisches Tief und hofft auf andere Gedanken oder eine Eingebung zu kommen. An Bord befinden sich viele interessante Mitreisende, die sich durchaus auch untereinander kennen, sich aber lieber von Bord stoßen würden, als Freunde zu sein. Als mitten auf dem Meer eines Nachts ein Mord geschieht, zeigt Nigel seine wahre Identität und Berufung und klärt den Fall auf.

«Das Einzige, was ich gegen das Kreuzfahrtleben habe», sagte Clare und gähnte erneut, «ist, dass es uns alle zu Wichtigtuern und Klatschmäulern macht.»
(Zitat Seite 80)

Wenn man mit diesem Kriminalroman beginnt, überlegt man bereits, wer der Passagiere wohl Opfer und Mörder ist. Ich habe mehrfach den Klapptext gelesen, weil ich dachte, dort würde auch ein Hinweis stehen. Aber nein! Es führt zu weit, hier die ganzen Verflechtungen und Machtkämpfe unter den Passagieren zu beschreiben, denn man könnte darauf verfallen, etwas zu verraten. Wenn man die Romane von Nickolas Blake aufmerksam liest, kann man ganz hervorragend miträtseln und genauso clever sein wie Nigel Strangeways.

Zum Lachen hat mich die Beschreibung der deutschen Reisegruppe gebracht:
Die blonden Personen, die, mit Kameras, Rücksäcken und Reiseführern bewaffnet, zielstrebig auf dem Schiffsdeck auf und ab marschierten, konnten nur Deutsche sein.
(Zitat Seite 19)

Fazit: Fantastischer Urlaubskrimi aus der Nigel Strangeways-Serie, der diesmal die fünf * verdient.
476 reviews9 followers
April 19, 2024
"Mord auf der Kreuzfahrt" von Nicholas Blake wirkt wie eine Zeitreise in eine Gesellschaft, die es so nicht mehr gibt und in der die britische upper class, abgesehen von den lästigen Ausländern an Bord - Deutsche mit Rucksäcken, Franzosen, die im Salon plappernde Rudelbildung betreiben und Italiener, die jeder gutaussehenden Frau schöne Augen machen - noch unter sich auf Reisen ist. Kein Wunder: das Buch wurde erstmals in den 1950-er Jahren veröffentlicht, und die anderen moralischen Standards jener Zeit schimmern durch, egal ob es um Homosexualität oder die skandalöse Frage gibt, ob ein Paar womöglich in Sünde, also unverheiratet zusammenlebt. Wobei das erotischen Eskapaden, die allerdings nicht detailgenau ausgebreitet werden, offensichtlich nicht im Wege steht.

Aber getrennte Kabinen für Meisterdetektiv Nigel Strangeways und seine Freundin, die Bildhauerin Clare Massinger sind auf der Reise Anstandspflicht. Getrennt schlafen, aber gemeinsam ermitteln und über die lieben Mitreisenden lästern, das ist hier die Regel. Überhaupt wird, ehe der Fall um eine verschwundene Passagierin an Fahrt aufnimmt, nach Herzenslust getratscht - auch ein Kreuzfahrtschiff ist irgendwie nur ein Dorf! Und die Passagiere zwischen Bildungsreise und Vergnügungslust entstammen einem Personen-Potpourri, das auch in einem Agatha-Christie-Roman nicht unpassend wäre, von der Femme fatale über den patenten Bischof und seine Frau, verwöhnte Internatszöglinge mit entsprechendem public school Akzent, der selbst beim Lesen hörbar zu sein scheint und einem exzentrischen Kind sowie einer Wissenschaftsfehde und altgriechische Übersetzungen.

Blake schreibt gewissermaßen im leichten Plauderton - "Darling" hier, "unerhört" da, in einem Stil, der gleichzeitig charmant-altmodisch wie zeitlos ist. Ein klassischer Whodunit, dessen Lösung schon ganz am Anfang in einem Nebensatz angedeutet wird und der zugleich ein Gesellschaftsbild einer vergangenen Epoche ist.

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