Order of Agatha Raisin Books
Agatha Raisin is a character and series of mystery novels by Scottish author M.C. Beaton (Marion Chesney). Raisin starts out as a frustrated PR agent in London who decides to retire from that line of work, moves to the Cotswolds and begins solving murders as a detective.
The Agatha Raisin series started in 1992 with Agatha Raisin and the Quiche of Death and continues on to this day with over 20 novels in the series. Below is the order of when each of M.C. Beaton’s Agatha Raisin books were originally released:
Publication Order of Agatha Raisin Books
Publication Order of Agatha Raisin Non-Fiction Books
The Agatha Raisin Companion | (2010) | Description / Buy at Amazon.com |
Note: The book titles may or may not contain “Agatha Raisin and the…” as a prefix to the title.
RIP M.C. Beaton. You brought us kaughter and light heartedness. Agatha is not real nor is she supposed to be. She‘s a little piece of each woman and its funny to see her fragility and truimphs. Hamish is relaxed and very scottish. We loved each book and you will be missed
Agree. Ignore the comments from some people below who can’t seem to get their point across without being rude, your books sell and have TV shows, so you rock!
Rest in peace Marion Chesney. Thanks for the entertaining stories of Agatha and Hamish.
R W Green has got the okay before Marion chesney to continue the Agatha Raisin and Hamish MacBeth Series. the books will be M C Beaton with RW Green.
There seems to be a glaring continuum issue.in some of the book Mrs. Bloxby’s first name is Margaret and then in others her name is Sarah.
There is an explanation where it’s clarified. She explains that her name is Sarah Margaret and some people call her Sarah and others Margaret. She answers to both.
Mrs Bloxby is Margret Sarah but most call her
Sarah. But she is refered to by her first name
Sometimes. She qualified this to Agatha in on
Of the books
thought this was suppose to be a review of the books, not another dose of across the pond name calling-get a grip gertie, and focus on the story-which is perfect brain candy-which is why I read-to escape a wee bit…love the Agatha in the pages(not on screen), and Beaton does a great job at entertaining while I work…
Poorly written drivel with obnoxious inconsistent characters and hugely stretched believability in the outlandish sequence of events that bounces around illogically in loopy tangents to fill space in the desperate hope of finding a vaguely plausible ending . Nothing like Agatha Christie’s cleverly written storied. MC Beaton must be a total nut case and whack job to write this kind of crap that is an insult to an intelligent reader. A VERY unsatisfying read. Total garbage and wasted time spent reading.
I am a fan of Agatha Christie, a fan of Shakespeare and also MC Beaton. Can’t believe that you actually finished it if you hated it that much. Keep your obnoxious, outlandish and illogical opinions to yourself. Nut case? Whack job? not sure what you mean …..oh you must be speaking American, poor soul.
I agree with you, the author must be a nut case and a whack job to write in such an obnoxious, clearly outlandish and highly illogical fashion. I gather you must be American re: your “speaking American” comment (?? relevance or just emotional spitting?)because I most certainly am not! The actual term for the language we are reading and writing in is “English” in case there was some confusion on your part. I’m sure you’ll agree that it is really hard to see literature stoop to the level of a Cosmo mag or the Inquirer as is the case with these little “novellas” . Good for you that you’ve read Agatha Christie and Shakespeare! Sad that you can’t differentiate between good and poor literature, though. Keep trying and above all, keep reading! It’s wonderful that we are all entitled to express our opinions intelligently (most of us).
Just from interest what is “Cosmo mag and the Inquirer”?
Cosmo and Nationial Inquirer are American trash magazines—one objectifies women and the other features “gossip” —usually untrue.
I agree RHD, some people are too thick to realise these are different style books that are noting to do with AC’s style. The sheers amount of sales MC Beaton has achieved proves that these stories are a great little read.
Some folks seem to want to string together as many syllables as they can. And all in run-on sentences.
you can’t spell
You call them typos my dear. Arrogant lot.
I agree only an american could not get the humour
And then call her such ridiculous names. No
Accounting for class
No, it’s not great literature, but these books are fun. How are the characters inconsistent? They are consistent throughout the series. I love Agatha’s character. She’s tough but insecure and she’s driven and curious. I also like Hamish, but not as much as Agatha. Now, the televised series is very unsatisfying as the characters don’t match what’s in my mind.
OMG Gert: get a grip. What makes you the expert on MC Beaton books? I must be a nut case along with the wonderful MC Beaton, because the characters name is Agatha are you trying to compare Agatha Christie? Guess I’m a whack job for liking MC Beaton’s books. To each his own Gert. You didn’t like MC Beaton’s writing that’s ok, move one and call it good, and chalk it off to an author you won’t be reading, but don’t be SO RUDE! Life is too short for that nonsense.
I am an American and a huge fan M. C Beaton and everything that she writes. I especially love Agatha Raisin, her books are not meant to be like Agatha Christie’s so I don’t why you are comparing the two. If you don’t like them, why are you wasting your time reading them? Your viewpoint is something else that you wasted your time on and it is not going to affect any of those that love Agatha Raisin, especially me.
In the potted gardener john is referred to as james near the end of the book! Im reading the public library of hamilton county ohios digital e book version. Who can correct this?
‘Hiss and Hers’ is on the list after ‘As The Pig Turns’ and before ‘Something Borrowed, Someone Dead’.
There appears to be one book missing from the list. “Hiss and Hers” published in 2012.
it’s 23rd down on the list