May 4, 2026
A False and Fatal Claim, by Iona Whishaw
Lane Winslow is back in Iona Whishaw’s latest mystery, A False and Fatal Claim, the fourteenth title in her bestselling series set just outside Nelson, BC, in the idyllic hamlet of King’s Cove. Which is where the story begins this time, not long after Lane’s sojourn to Mexico, when Lane is visiting the beach and discovers not a body (surprising!—or at least she hasn’t found a body YET) but a hat. Meanwhile, a motorboat has been reported missing, and so too has a local boy gone astray.
What connects these three events? And more importantly: where is the body? And whose will it be?
All of this intrigue is in addition to local excitement around the wedding of Sergeant Ames, and the usual small town gossip and shenanigans. Plus, Lane is charged for caring for the missing boy when he finally turns up, because it appears his mother has run off too, just to someplace different. And the boy offers her one of her biggest challenges yet, making her consider questions of nature and nurture and how the troubled boy’s difficult life has kept him from learning to make proper attachments and made him lash out at the least opportunity. (Whishaw’s previous career as a teacher, social worker, and school principal has informed this story-line to great effect.)
I’m also not one to put pressure on couples to have children (it’s not for everybody!) but I’ve been wondering whether Lane and Darling would—it’s been a while since their wedding and a baby could be a nice distract from the poetry manuscript that Lane is perpetually avoiding, not to mention a diversion from stumbling across bodies. And Whishaw drops some interesting breadcrumbs making me wonder if a pregnancy plot-line might indeed be on the horizon…
The setting is cozy, the characters familiar and beloved, the mystery itself twisty and interesting, and all of this is underlined by a gorgeous and satisfying foundation of justice and social justice—the story is set in 1948, but Whishaw’s characters push back against racism and sexism in a beautiful way. As with all the books in the series, which manage to remain vital and fresh fourteen books in, these cozy reads manage to suggest provocative answers to some of the most pressing questions of the moment.





