England expects

Sara Sheridan, 1968-

Book - 2018

When sportswriter Joey Gillingham stops off at a Brighton barbershop for a shave and a trim, he gets more than he bargained for--a slashed throat. The journalist's next headline story in the paper is his obituary. With the ghastly murder the talk of the seaside town, Mirabelle and her close friend and coworker Vesta Churchill find themselves irresistibly drawn to the case. Rumors of the newspaperman being a member of the freemasons lead the ladies to the group's local lodge, where they happen upon a cleaning lady in the throes of poisoning. Are the two deaths related? The common thread seems to connect to the secret society. Despite being warned off by Superintendent McGregor, the fearless friends continue to investigate, breaking... into an abandoned royal residence in Brighton and following a trail of clues to a Cambridge college and bizarre masonic rituals. To beard the lion in his own den, Mirabelle and Vesta will need to walk the razor's edge--but with desperate characters and more bodies turning up, it's going to be a close shave ...

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Subjects
Genres
Mystery fiction
Historical fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
New York, NY : Kensington Books 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Sara Sheridan, 1968- (author)
Edition
First Kensington hardcover edition
Item Description
Includes Questions for Readers Group.
Physical Description
290 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781496701268
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Former WWII British Intelligence agent and mistress to a recently deceased officer, Mirabelle Bevan continues to court trouble in 1950s Brighton. Owning a debt-collection agency would provide enough drama for most people, but Mirabelle is not most people. When a journalist and successful gambler is found with his throat slit, Mirabelle can't help but take an interest. And then the cleaning lady at the local Masonic lodge dies right in front of her? It's like Christmas! Mirabelle is joined in her investigations by her colleague Vesta, who frequently has to remind her boss that if Mirabelle thinks it's hard being a woman in a man's world, she ought to try being black on top of it. This smart historical series (London Calling, 2017) continues to combine mid-century gender and race taboos with a cracking-good mystery. Fans of conspiracy theories and the mystique of the Freemasons will enjoy some wild speculation about the brotherhood and how Mirabelle and her fellow females feel about being told they're not welcome.--Keefe, Karen Copyright 2018 Booklist

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

London journalist Joey Gillingham says he's in Brighton to cover a boxing match, but he's actually heading for a meeting on a career-changing scoop, in Sheridan's strained third mystery set in 1950s England (after 2017's London Calling). When Gillingham ends up with his throat slashed, debt collector Mirabelle Bevan is intrigued by the unusually bold crime. Slipshod treatment of the body by the police, many of whom are Freemasons, convinces her that the secretive brotherhood is covering something up-and after Gillingham's coded journal goes missing, Det. Supt. Alan McGregor, Mirabelle's secret admirer, is inclined to agree. When Mirabelle and her business partner, Vesta Churchill, talk their way into the Masonic lodge, they witness its charlady die of poisoning. A visit to the derelict Brighton Pavilion, where the dead woman also worked, produces new puzzles. The Masons remain generic villains beneath their exotic trappings, and the investigation relies too much on unfounded surmise, coincidence, and confession. Hopefully, Sheridan, who has a gift for evoking the era's class, racial, and social tensions, will return to form next time. Agent: Jenny Brown, Jenny Brown Assoc. (U.K.). (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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

A former secret service agent is a magnet for murder in 1950s Brighton.Although Mirabelle Bevan's duties as an associate at a debt-recovery service seem humdrum, she's constantly drawn to cases involving murder (London Calling, 2017). So she's intrigued when sportswriter Joey Gillingham, who's come up from London for a boxing match, gets his throat cut in a local barbershop. The police clear the crime scene suspiciously fast, and Mirabelle's associate, ex-cop Bill Turpin, suggests that since almost the entire force are Freemasons, they may be covering up some secret related to the Masons. Ever curious, Mirabelle and her pal, secretary/sleuth Vesta Churchill, talk their way into the local Masonic Temple, where they witness the painful poisoning death of the cleaning lady, Mrs. Chapman. Although neither murder seems to have anything to offer Mirabelle, the firm is soon hired by Joey's sister, who claims that his coded notebook with racing tips and winning betting slips has vanished. The only police officer Mirabelle trusts is DS Alan McGregor, a Scot who's not a member of the Masons. But he can see no link between the two deaths. Mirabelle finds a connection of sorts when she learns that Mrs. Chapman also cleaned at the Brighton Pavilion, a moldering mess that's still a former royal residence. At the pavilion they find restorer Daphne Marsden secretly in residence while she works to save historical objects. They also find a connection to Gillingham through Mrs. Chapman's love of betting. Daphne holds the key to the motives for murder, but both Mirabelle and Vesta find themselves in a desperate situation when the killer targets them.Adventurous and tough, the heroine must fight the perception that women are useless as sleuths, and her sidekick has an even tougher time battling prejudice against both women and black people as they unravel a puzzling mystery. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.