The Devil's Ribbon
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- 11,99 €
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- 11,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
A trail of beribboned murders. A ticking bomb. A city about to explode.
July, 1858: London swelters under the oppressive heat of the hottest summer on record, and trouble is brewing. Forensic scientist Professor Adolphus Hatton and his trusty assistant, Albert Roumande, have a morgue full of cholera victims. The dead are all Irish, the poorest of London's poor. They came in their thousands ten years ago, forced into the London slums by the terrible famine. Now they live segregated from the rest of Victorian society, a race apart in this heaving city who are at once everywhere and nowhere. But they are a close knit people, and deeply politicised. From the docks in Limehouse to the taverns of St Giles, Fenian groups are talking of violence and of liberation.
When a series of violent murders threatens to cause tensions to boil over, Scotland Yard calls on Hatton and Roumande to help investigate. The seemingly unconnected victims, who hail from all strata of society, are linked by the same macabre calling card: a bright Fenian green ribbon placed strategically about their corpses. While Hatton's search for clues leads him into the spell of a blindingly beautiful woman, a widow of one of the slain, rumblings of a bombing campaign led by an agitator priest and his gang of would-be terrorists build throughout the slums.
As the orchestra of veiled motives, divided loyalties, and violent retribution reaches a crescendo, Hatton's skills are tested to the limit. With Roumande, he must race across London to an island with a shipwreck and a secret on a nail-biting race against time in this gripping, elegantly executed Victorian mystery in the tradition of The Dante Club and The Somnambulist.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A cholera outbreak plagues 1858 London in Meredith's lively if often gruesome second historical featuring forensic professor Alphonse Hatton and his assistant, Albert Roumande (after 2010's Devoured). At the same time, Fenians fighting for Irish home rule are committing terrorist acts across England. In London's squalid St. Giles neighborhood, home to many impoverished Irish, firebrand Father O'Brian is stirring up riots. When Gabriel McCarthy, MP, hated by his fellow Irish as "the appeaser of Highgate" for compromising with the British, is poisoned in his fashionable home, his radical brother and heir, Damien, becomes the prime suspect. A series of vicious killings follows, with every victim found to have a bright green ribbon stuck in his throat as a sinister warning from extremist Fenian "Ribbonmen." Hatton joins forces with flamboyant detective Jeremiah Grey to investigate, though the professor is distracted at times by the murdered MP's alluring widow. A chaotic chase leads to a startling climax.