Oxford blood

Antonia Fraser, 1932-

Book - 1985

In this tale Jemima is reluctantly shooting a TV expose--"Golden Lads and Girls"--The exotic lifestyles of overprivileged undergraduates. Among them is Lord Saffron, the wealthy, twenty-year-old heir to the former foreign secretary. When a confession by a dying midwife throws Saffron's birth and bloodline into doubt, Jemima's interest in the documentary perks up considerably. Then a student is murdered, drawing Jemima into a case that will demand the utmost of her skills of detection.

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MYSTERY/Fraser, Antonia
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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
New York, N.Y. : W.W. Norton [1985]
Language
English
Main Author
Antonia Fraser, 1932- (-)
Edition
First American edition
Physical Description
224 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780393318241
9780393022292
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Fun and games among the English landed gentry, as observed by TV personality-sleuth Jemina Shore (Quiet as a Nun, etc.), who's called on to hear the confession of dying nurse Elsie Connolly--a confession about her part in the substitutions of a healthy baby for the dead infant born to Lord and Lady St. Ives. Now 20 years old, the baby, Oxford student Lord Saffron, is a spoiled heir to a fortune, a title, and historic manse Saffron Ivy, and is having doubts about his roots--doubts planted by nurse Elsie. He also suspects that someone's out to kill him--not totally surprising in view of his behavior. Saffron enlists Jemima's help in trying to find his enemy. She's already involved in Megalith TV's projected exploration of ""Golden Kids"" at Oxford and soon meets Saffron's neighbor Professor Mossbanker (Proffy), who juggles a wife and eight children with a longtime mistress--classics-scholar Eugenia Jones, whose fey daughter Tiggy (nee Antigone) is engaged to Saffron. Then there are Jack and Fanny Iverstone, offspring of Saffron's racist politician-cousin Andrew, along with various cutely nicknamed students. Sandwiched between balls, parties, fancy lunches and encounters in bed and on the tennis courts are two murders and a near miss. A study of blood types and some old gossip help Jemima get the relationships straightened out. But the murderer's identity almost escapes her. Nebulous motivation might explain why. A prime collection of well-drawn eccentrics partly compensates for the author's wearingly brittle sprightliness. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.