A pattern of lies

Charles Todd

Book - 2015

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MYSTERY/Todd, Charles
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Subjects
Genres
Mystery fiction
Historical fiction
Published
New York, NY : William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers [2015]
Language
English
Main Author
Charles Todd (-)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
325 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780062386250
9780062386243
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In the last days of WWI, battlefield nurse and amateur sleuth Bess Crawford is staying with an old friend in a small town in England. A catastrophe at a nearby gunpowder mill casts suspicion of arson and murder on the mill's owner, who happens to be Bess' host. Convinced the man is innocent, Bess is determined to find the one surviving witness who can clear her friend's name. But there's a problem: the witness is currently in combat, fighting at the front. Can Bess find him before someone else does and perhaps silences him forever? Fans of the Crawford series should really enjoy this installment, and anyone who enjoys WWI or between-the-wars mysteries starring resolute women (Maisie Dobbs, for example) should get to know Bess Crawford right away.--Pitt, David Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A chance encounter in the fall of 1918 lands Bess Crawford in the midst of a disturbing mystery in bestseller Todd's suspenseful seventh outing for the veteran British nurse (after 2014's An Unwilling Accomplice). With her hopes high that the slaughter of WWI will end soon, Bess manages to get leave from France to visit her parents. But when she's stranded in Canterbury waiting for a train, she runs into Maj. Mark Ashton, a former patient. Her pleasure at the unexpected meeting is soon marred by his revelation that his family has been the subject of a sustained whispering campaign. Two years earlier, the family business, a gunpowder factory, exploded, causing more than 100 deaths. Though the official investigation ruled out sabotage, rumor has it that Mark's father, Philip, was responsible. Even Philip's arrest doesn't end the Ashtons' persecution, and Bess hazards her life to find the truth. The resolution doesn't match the buildup, but this is a minor shortcoming. Agent: Jane Chelius, Jane Chelius Literary Agency. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A nursing sister in the last days of World War I tries to help a man belatedly accused of murder. When Bess Crawfor, of Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service, encounters her former patient Maj. Mark Ashton in Canterbury, he invites her to stay with him and his parents at their ancestral home in nearby Cranbourne. She accepts but soon realizes she's come at a bad time. An explosion in the Ashton powder mill two years ago has turned the Cranbourne villagers against the family. Although the army had commandeered the mill from Mark's father, Philip, and ignored his warnings not to push production too hard, Philip is still blamed for the disaster. But Bess is as puzzled as the Ashtons about why the villagers should suddenly become even more agitatedand why Philip should be arrested so long after the deaths of the millworkers. When Bess returns to the front in France, she tracks down the one witness who actually saw the explosion. But he won't request leave from the army to come back to England and testify. Instead, Bess returns to Cranbourne to question the villagers, whose reasons for harassing the Ashtons range from conspiracy theories to resentment of perceived wrongs during the reign of Henry VIII to beliefs in an angry water deity. Even so, Bess is certain that one person has found a way to unite them in hatred of the Ashtons. She must juggle her search for facts with her nursing duties in France, as soldiers maim and kill one another for futile possession of inches of land. Even when someone at the hospital tries to murder Bess, it doesn't stop her efforts to find the man behind the campaign to see Philip Ashton hanged. Despite uneven pacing and a couple of creaky plot devices, Bess' seventh case (An Unwilling Accomplice, 2014, etc.) does its strong, determined heroine credit. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.