



A Slash of Emerald
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4.6 • 14 Ratings
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
In a riveting new novel in a Victorian-set mystery series brimming with authentic atmosphere, Doctor Julia Lewis, Scotland Yard’s first female medical examiner, and her partner, Detective Inspector Richard Tennant, investigate a string of murders in the art world.
London, 1867: Among the genteel young ladies of London society, painting is a perfectly acceptable pastime—but a woman who dares to pursue art as a profession is another prospect, indeed. Dr. Julia Lewis, familiar with the disrespect afforded women in untraditional careers, is hardly surprised when Scotland Yard shows little interest in complaints made by her friend, Mary Allingham, about a break-in at her art studio. Mary is just one of many “lady painters” being targeted by vandals.
Painters’ sitters are vanishing, too—women viewed by some as dispensable outcasts. Inspector Richard Tennant, however, takes the attacks seriously, suspecting they’re linked to the poison-pen letters received by additional members of the Allingham family. For Julia, the issue is complicated by Tennant’s previous relationship with Mary’s sister-in-law, Louisa, and by her own surprising reaction to that entanglement.
But when someone close to them commits suicide and a young woman turns up dead, the case can no longer be so easily ignored by ‘respectable’ society. Layer after layer, Julia and Tennant scrape away the facts of the case like paint from a canvas. What emerges is a somber picture of vice, depravity, and deception stretching from London’s East End to the Far East—with a killer at its center, determined to get away with one last, grisly murder . . .
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In McDonough's desultory sequel to Murder by Lamplight, Dr. Julia Lewis, who runs a clinic in the seedy London neighborhood of Whitechapel, is drawn into a sprawling murder investigation in 1867. An accident at a skating pond brings Julia into contact with the Allington family: artist Mary; her brother, Charles; and his wife, Louisa. When model and dressmaker's assistant Franny Riley is found raped and murdered, Scotland Yard calls on Julia to perform the autopsy, after which she discovers that Charles knew Franny. Then Charles appears to die by suicide after ingesting arsenic-spiked paint, but Mary suspects murder. As Julia tries to get to the bottom of these events, the body count rises. The plot incorporates a potpourri of Victorian vice, including gambling, art forgery, blackmail, prostitution, and drug addiction, to overstimulating effect. Meanwhile, predictable misunderstandings fail to add stakes to a tepid romance subplot between Julia and a Scotland Yarder. Historical fans will enjoy McDonough's well-placed tidbits about early subterranean railways and the Royal Academy, but some of the discussions of the era's gender roles land with a thud. This falls short of its promising predecessor.