Murder at the Chase
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- $10.99
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- $10.99
Publisher Description
Crime writer sleuth Donald Langham is faced with the classic locked-room conundrum in this “ripping good” historical mystery (Booklist).
July, 1955. Donald Langham has interrupted his romantic break in rural Suffolk with the delectable Maria Dupré to assist a fellow writer. Alasdair Endicott has requested Langham’s help in discovering what’s happened to his father, Edward, who seems to have disappeared without trace from inside his locked study.
Before he vanished, the elder Endicott had been researching a book on the notorious Satanist Vivian Stafford. Could the proposed biography have something to do with his disappearance? Does local resident Stafford really possess supernatural powers, as some believe?
As Langham and Dupré question those around them, it becomes clear that there have been strange goings-on in the sleepy village of Humble Barton. But is the village really haunted—or does someone merely want it to look that way? With a further shocking discovery, the case takes a disturbing new twist.
“For readers who enjoy classic Golden Age mysteries,” Eric Brown’s “charming English locked-room mystery features a well-crafted and exciting plot and two attractive protagonists” (Library Journal).
“Reads like a country-house whodunit from the golden age, packed with fascinating characters, each boasting a motive for murder.” —Kirkus Reviews
“Plenty of unexpected twists. Agatha Christie fans will find a lot to like.” —Publishers Weekly
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Brown's pleasing sequel to 2013's Murder by the Book takes mystery writer Donald Langham and his girlfriend, Marie Dupr , to Suffolk, England, in the summer of 1955 for a romantic holiday. When Donald and Marie learn that a friend's father, Edward Endicott, has disappeared from his locked study at his place in Humble Barton, they switch into sleuthing mode. Endicott, "an ex-Hollywood screenwriter who penned mystery thrillers," was working on a biography of a Victorian-era Satanist self-described as a "confidant of the Devil himself." Some in Humble Barton suspect supernatural forces are afoot, but a skeptical Donald and Marie work with the local police toward a rational solution, while enjoying country walks and providing comfort to a blackmail victim. For all the criminal goings-on, Brown doesn't generate much suspense, but his well-told tale offers plenty of unexpected twists. Agatha Christie fans will find a lot to like.