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Your Guide to Not Getting Murdered in a Quaint English Village
Crime Reads ^ | Today | Maureen Johnson

Posted on 01/29/2021 2:26:59 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin

It’s happened. You’ve finally taken that dream trip to England. You have seen Big Ben, Buckingham Palace, and Hyde Park. You rode in a London cab and walked all over the Tower of London. Now you’ve decided to leave the hustle and bustle of the city and stretch your legs in the verdant countryside of these green and pleasant lands. You’ve seen all the shows. You know what to expect. You’ll drink a pint in the sunny courtyard of a local pub. You’ll wander down charming alleyways between stone cottages. Residents will tip their flat caps at you as they bicycle along cobblestone streets. It will be idyllic.

Unless you end up in an English Murder Village. It’s easy enough to do. You may not know you are in a Murder Village, as they look like all other villages. So when you visit Womble Hollow or Shrimpling or Pickles-in-the-Woods or Nasty Bottom or Wombat-on-Sea or wherever you are going, you must have a plan. Below is a list of sensible precautions you can take on any trip to an English village. Follow them and you may just live.

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PLACES TO AVOID

___________________________________

The village fête

The village fête is a fair, a celebration on the village green. They toss coconuts, judge cakes, drink tea, and whack toy rats with mallets. It’s a nice way to spend a summer’s day and thin out the local population, because where there is a fête, there is murder. If you enter a town while the fête is happening, you are already dead. The tea urn is filled with poison. The sponge cakes are full of glass. There’s an axe in the fortune telling tent. The coconuts are bombs. It’s like the Hunger Games, but dangerous.

Anywhere with a vat

In English villages, vats only exist for drowning people—in beer, in pickling brine, in whiskey, in jam. This is doubly true if the vat was built by 14th century monks. If anyone offers to show you a vat, say you need to get something from your car, then start the engine and run them over. The police understand this sort of thing. Tell them about the vat. Article continues after advertisement

Places with gargoyles or statuary

Ghosts and monsters of stone. They are there to kill you.

The village church

The vicar will find your body if you venture here.

The village shop

They sell cheese, stamps, tea, and death.

The stables

How do you prefer to go: pitchforked, or stomped to death by a two-thousand-pound animal? Spoiler: it will be both.

Canopy beds

They have snakes in them.

Kitchens

No.

Attics

Join the ghosts up there, why don’t you.

Higher floors

Stay low. They can’t throw you off the balcony if you never go up the stairs.

The stairs

They are the xylophones of death.

Lower floors

Marble busts fall down, not up.

Basements

They don’t even have to dig a hole to put you in.

Bathtubs

You’re better than this.

Wells

Full of the skeletons of Victorian children and, if you are unwise, you.

The pond

Just remove water as a category.

The village green

Also land.

___________________________________

PEOPLE TO AVOID

___________________________________

The vicar

See previous note about the village church. When you see the vicar, run. If you are not dead yet, the vicar is obliged to kill you.

The newest resident in town

They don’t know the Old Ways yet and refuse to learn. They want to open up a Coolspa in that twee Grade Two-listed thatched cottage. They’re talking to you because no one else will talk to them. They’ll be a popsicle soon enough. Shun. Article continues after advertisement

Anyone who leaves a voice mail

Do not leave voice mails if you are in a murder mystery town. It means you Know Something. Don’t leave them. Don’t hang around people who do.

Anyone who looks out windows and sees things

Obviously.

The town doctor

The doctor has been up in everyone’s business and must die, along with anyone foolish enough to pay them a visit. You don’t need a doctor. You have the internet.

The local historian

They’ve just been looking through some old papers and found something very interesting. They’re just going to answer that knock on the door before telling the rest of the town what they found. If the historian tries to show you something, you punch them right in their dumb research-loving face and flee.

The impoverished aristocrat

Things are not great at the manor house. They’ve had to sell the lesser Turners and the staff is down to seven. They just found out what a microwave is and they are not happy about it. The poor aristocrat has just enough money to be a target and plenty of entitled rage. They are either the target of the falling bust or the one who plans on pushing it. Eat the rich. Article continues after advertisement

The gardener

Their roses are perfect because of all the people under them.

The amateur astronomer

They like to go out alone at night to a remote location with a big looking-tube to look. Draw a circle around every word in that sentence that means “no”.

Birdwatchers

Birds are related to dinosaurs. Did you know that? And like the dinosaur, the birdwatcher will soon be extinct because looking.

Train enthusiasts

“Why, yes, this carriage is from the 1984 stock and has thirty seats. It used to come in from London, Waterloo Station but when they redid the tracks in 1998, why I’ll show you right here is where they connected the two, this rail right here…oh no there goes my head.”

The thespian

They quote Shakespeare in public, to children.

Anyone with a lot of bees

Oh, you walk around dressed like a fencing ghost and raise eighty thousand little killing machines? Good to meet you.

Visiting mystery novelists

You’ll make nice story meat.

The loner with a stick

This person appears in town and wanders around, laughing into a bucket and saying things like, “Aye know what ye did, ye old salty doorknob!” They will be found dead soon enough, possibly covered in bees.

___________________________________

PEOPLE AND PLACES THAT ARE GENERALLY SAFE

___________________________________

The pub

No one would defile the pub.

Anyone with a dog

Stick with the dogs. Dogs are angels and protect us from everything and we don’t deserve them.


TOPICS: Books/Literature; Conspiracy; Hobbies; Society
KEYWORDS: books; murder
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To: This I Wonder32460

They actually have Midsomer Murder tours out of London.


21 posted on 01/29/2021 3:08:25 PM PST by Dr. Ursus
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
"The village shop They sell cheese..."

"Have you, in fact, got any cheese here at all?
Yes, sir
Really?
No, not really, sir.
You haven't?
No, sir, not a scrap
I was deliberately wasting your time, sir
Well, I'm sorry, but I'm going to have to shoot you"

22 posted on 01/29/2021 3:09:52 PM PST by outofsalt (If history teaches us anything, it's that history rarely teaches anything.)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
I'm reminded of an Avengers episode entitled Murdersville, about the picturesque village Little Storping In The Swuff. For a fee you could lure your enemy there, kill him in the middle of the street, and all the locals would nod politely and say, "Oh, aye, lovely day, innit?" Somebody really ought to offer a service like that. Wait, maybe they already do...
23 posted on 01/29/2021 3:13:32 PM PST by Billthedrill
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To: moovova
Whoops...wrong thread...

Perhaps you should drink de Zombie from de coco shell.

24 posted on 01/29/2021 3:14:58 PM PST by Steely Tom ([Voter Fraud] == [Civil War])
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To: siamesecats

I was chuffed when I saw your list.


25 posted on 01/29/2021 3:20:52 PM PST by Disambiguator
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To: Cecily

Indeed, why not? I really like Agatha Christie, just watched her interesting Murder on the Orient Express DVD last week.

Everyone’s guilty.


26 posted on 01/29/2021 3:22:28 PM PST by Veto! (Political Correctness Offends Me)
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To: siamesecats

I could murder a pint.


27 posted on 01/29/2021 3:24:34 PM PST by EvilCapitalist (We must FIGHT, I repeat it sir, we must FIGHT! -Patrick Henry)
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To: ZirconEncrustedTweezers

I LOVE the ‘Midsomer’ series! :)


28 posted on 01/29/2021 3:43:29 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust post-Apocalyptic skill set. )
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

The author has been watching Midsomer Murders. It’s available on Acorn.tv. Very, very good series.


29 posted on 01/29/2021 3:56:02 PM PST by Jemian (If it weren’t for double standards, the libs would have no standards at all.)
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To: This I Wonder32460

21 seasons with a 22nd on the way.


30 posted on 01/29/2021 3:57:29 PM PST by Jemian (If it weren’t for double standards, the libs would have no standards at all.)
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To: Kipp

‘Rosemary & Thyme’ is a fun series, and we just started, ‘Inspector Lewis.’


31 posted on 01/29/2021 4:01:49 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust post-Apocalyptic skill set. )
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To: rollo tomasi

Oh, yes. Whatever you do, stay out of Sandford, Gloucestershire, a regular “Village of the Year” winner. The inhabitants of the village will murder you but one must understand it is for the greater good.


32 posted on 01/29/2021 4:08:46 PM PST by MD Expat in PA (No. I am not a doctor nor have I ever played one on TV. The MD in my screen name stands for Maryland)
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To: Governor Dinwiddie

We’ve watched ‘Rosemary & Thyme’ a few years ago and even Beau enjoyed the series. I loaned the DVD set to my Mom and she also loved it.

I think it’s nearly time to watch it all over again. I’m also starting ‘Downton Abbey’ again, too. Binge watched it a few years after it was off the air. ;)


33 posted on 01/29/2021 4:11:23 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust post-Apocalyptic skill set. )
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To: outofsalt

If it concerns lying about cheese and/or being unable to deliver the goods? Justified Homicide! ;)


34 posted on 01/29/2021 4:13:44 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust post-Apocalyptic skill set. )
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To: MD Expat in PA
As long as there are pints offered, I will visit while making sure I behave myself.


35 posted on 01/29/2021 4:23:04 PM PST by rollo tomasi
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To: rollo tomasi

Yes, Hot Fuzz seems to include many items on the list.


36 posted on 01/29/2021 4:38:16 PM PST by hanamizu
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To: nickcarraway; All
I subscribe to BritBox, a steaming service with all British content. It is a great bargain. Only cost $5.99 for the entire year.

I have been binge watching murder mysteries since I signed up last fall. Agatha Christie's Poirot, Miss Marple, Midsomer Murders, Death in Paradise, Vera, Sherlock Holmes, and on and on and on. They are great.

It is amazing that there are so many murders in all of these quaint English villages. /sarcasm/

There is other content on the streaming service but the murder mysteries will keep me busy for months and months.

The English love their murder mysteries.

37 posted on 01/29/2021 4:41:03 PM PST by HotHunt
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To: Diana in Wisconsin

Diana in the library with a baffling post.
Did I win?


38 posted on 01/29/2021 4:43:21 PM PST by Tijeras_Slim
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To: rollo tomasi

Just stay out of Calahoon Park, knee deep in dog muck thieving kids and crusty jugglers. “CRUSTY JUGGLERS”.


39 posted on 01/29/2021 4:50:49 PM PST by MD Expat in PA (No. I am not a doctor nor have I ever played one on TV. The MD in my screen name stands for Maryland)
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To: HotHunt

I LOVE ‘Vera.’ I think I’m on Season 8. Most of them are based on the Ann Cleeves murder mysteries. So, SO good! :)

I have the ‘Miss Fisher Murder Mysteries’ movie on deck. ‘Miss Fisher and the Crypt of Tears.’

It didn’t get the best reviews, and yes, she’s Australian and not ‘English,’ but I’m going to give it a go. I really liked the original series. Wish it had been longer; loved all the characters.

Australia: The ‘Doctor Blake’ mysteries were good, too.


40 posted on 01/29/2021 4:55:05 PM PST by Diana in Wisconsin (I don't have 'Hobbies.' I'm developing a robust post-Apocalyptic skill set. )
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