Dungeons and Danger by Elizabeth Penney Series: A Ravensea Castle Mystery #2
Published by Minotaur Books on May 26, 2026
Source: NetGalley
Genres: Cozy Mystery
Pages: 287
Format: eARC
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As Halloween approaches, Ravensea Castle is bustling with excitement as Nora Asquith welcomes the fall season guests to her family's newly converted bed and breakfast. A historian studying the movements of the Vikings has traced their exploits to Ravensea. A certain Viking woman, known as the Red Maiden, landed here and the historian believes she buried a treasure hoard before the castle was built. He is hopeful he can find the hoard now. Nora can't help but wonder if the enigmatic castle ghost she's always referred to as the woman in red could be this very Viking?
Meanwhile, a team of four ghost hunters is coming to stay at Ravensea for the filming of Britain's Got Ghosts. Former students of the historian, the group arrives with their own rivalries and baggage. They try to see who can make the most paranormal contacts and end up getting more than they bargained for.
When the historian is murdered during a Viking festival on castle grounds and his notes go missing, Nora can't help but wonder if the treasure was why he was killed . . . and could it be connected to the visiting ghost hunters? Additional "accidents" befalling the hunters raise the stakes as Nora races to find the killer—and the treasure—before another death occurs.
Dungeons and Danger is the second in the Ravensea Castle mystery series, but I think it could be read as a standalone. The mystery is self-contained, and although we have several characters returning from the first, the author does a good job of introducing everyone.
The Asquith family has turned their centuries old castle into a B&B, complete with resident ghosts. Their current guests include a professor specializing in Viking history who believes there’s a treasure hidden on the grounds and a group of ghost hunters filming a show. And the castle is hosting a huge Viking festival. “Accidents” start piling up and it’s no surprise when someone ends up murdered.
The returning characters are all well-developed and interesting, without going over the line into quirky. I like Nora Asquith and her family. Their interactions feel genuine and they work together well. Nora is dating the local detective inspector, Finlay Cole, but they both act like adults and their relationship is definitely secondary to the mystery as far as the book is concerned.
The plot is put together well, The motive is clear – there’s maybe a treasure somewhere on the castle grounds, and the suspects are obvious, but narrowing it down to the killer takes some work, even with a bit of help from the ghosts.
Overall, it’s a fun mystery and I liked the ending.
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