Christmas at Baskerville Hall cover

Christmas at Baskerville Hall

Sherlock Holmes and Lucy James Mystery #7.7 • Book 15

4.25 Goodreads
(695 ratings)

Why You'll Love This

Baskerville Hall at Christmas sounds festive — until someone at the party has a hidden agenda.

  • Great if you want: a cozy holiday mystery revisiting a beloved Gothic setting
  • The experience: quick and warm with just enough menace to keep it interesting
  • The writing: Elliott and Veley weave series continuity tightly without losing new readers
  • Skip if: you haven't read the series — character payoffs won't fully land

About This Book

When Sir Henry Baskerville opens the doors of the infamous Devonshire estate to Sherlock Holmes and the entire Baker Street team for a Christmas holiday, it sounds like an occasion for warmth, goodwill, and perhaps a welcome respite from danger. It is not. Something darker is stirring beneath the festive trimmings, and Sir Henry's invitation carries motives he hasn't fully disclosed. Elliott and Veley take one of fiction's most atmospheric settings and layer it with holiday tension, turning the familiar into something freshly unsettling — a reminder that shadows grow long even in the middle of winter celebrations.

At just over a hundred pages, this entry in the Lucy James series moves with the efficiency of a well-set trap, delivering the cozy pleasures of a Christmas mystery without padding or sentimentality. The authors have a strong command of voice, keeping Lucy's perspective grounded and observant while honoring the Holmesian tradition without feeling derivative. Readers already invested in these characters will find the shorter format satisfying rather than slight — a tightly wrapped gift that knows exactly when to stop unwrapping.