Death is My Bridegroom was published in 1969 by Dominic Devine, shortly after The Sleeping Tiger, a strong and cleverly plotted book with a distinctive storyline. Here, I think he was trying to do something different again. In fact, one of the things I like about Devine is that he kept varying the way he told his stories. Each was a stand-alone, and most of them were distinctive and very well-crafted, with good characterisation as well as crafty plots.
The story is set at Branchfield University, evidently in England (although Devine worked as a senior administrator in a Scottish university, and the scene does shift north of the border at one point). There is quite a bit about university politics, which has an authentic flavour (for the time the book was written) and Devine amuses himself by making a few jokes at the expense of academics (e.g. 'If there was one thing academics had in common, it was a taste for other people's alcohol').
The students are protesting about the alleged mistreatment of one of their number, and a a fake kidnap stunt connected with the protest is utilised for malign purposes by someone who has murder on their mind. One of the key characters is Barbara Letchworth, daughter of a rich benefactor of the university, another is her lover, the charming but feckless Michael Denton. Barbara is the potential 'victim' in the fake kidnap, but things don't go to plan.
I found this book an enjoyable read, but although the story is quite elaborate and twisty, the culprit is easier to spot than in many of his books, and the truth is revealed some time before the end. I think this is because Devine was trying to focus on character and the psychological stresses that can give rise to murder. I'm not sure he got the balance quite right on this occasion, but the book is still a pretty good read.
