Mr Campion's visit

Mike Ripley

Book - 2019

"Suffolk, 1970. Albert Campion is back in Black Dudley, once the scene of murder and mayhem but now home to the brand-new University of Suffolk Coastal. Appointed to the role of the university's Visitor, Campion finds he has a curiously vague remit, but his initial visit to the concrete campus takes an unexpected turn when the body of charismatic Chilean professor Pascual Perez-Catalan, a rising star and genius scientist in the field of geochemistry, is fished out of the ornamental lake. It seems Pascual was unpopular among his fellow academics and lecturers, his trail-blazing research taking up most of the university's new computing capacity ... and he was also a keen ladies man. Drawn into another puzzling murder, Campion m...ust negotiate internal politics, seething jealousy and resentment, blackmail, betrayal and a phantom trumpeter as he searches for a ruthless killer."--Publisher description.

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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Novels
Published
London : Severn House 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Mike Ripley (author)
Other Authors
Margery Allingham, 1904-1966 (-)
Edition
First world edition
Item Description
Continues from the original series by Margery Allingham.
Physical Description
277 pages : illustration ; 23 cm
ISBN
9780727888976
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Ripley neatly combines humor and mystery in his sixth outing for Margery Allingham's gentleman sleuth, Albert Campion (after 2018's Mr. Campion's War). In 1970, Campion returns to the scene of an old crime, a house called Black Dudley, where his first case was set. Black Dudley is now part of a new school, the University of Suffolk Coastal, where Campion has been tapped by one of the university's main supporters, the Bishop of St. Edmondsbury, to serve as the Visitor, an ombudsman position. When a faculty member, Professor Pascual Perez-Catalan is stabbed in the back on university grounds, Campion investigates. The victim was researching ways to predict the presence in the earth of valuable minerals and metals. At one point, Campion teases the local inspector by suggesting that the suspects all be gathered in the library, explaining that this is a request he has always wanted to make. Having the sleuth's family members, who played prominent parts in earlier books, largely offstage allows Ripley to focus on the endearing Campion. Fans of Allingham's originals will be well pleased. (Oct.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Forty years after the fact, Albert Campion returns to the scene of his very first crime.When the designated Visitor to the University of Suffolk Coastal is suddenly mired in scandal, the bishop of St. Edmondsbury needs a replacement posthaste. Since the campus has been built on the site of Black Dudley, the stately country house in which Margery Allingham first introduced Mr. Campion to the world (The Black Dudley Murder, 1929), the bishop's persuaded to sponsor the ebulliently feckless sleuth, who's now 70. Mr. Campion responds by giving an anodyne speech to the freshmen, chatting up everyone who crosses his path for three days, and then repairing to Monewdon Hall, the home of his wife's sister and her husband, just in time to get a phone call summoning him back to campus. Professor Pascual Perez-Catalan, a geochemist appointed to head USC's Earth Sciences division, has been stabbed in the back, and Detective Superintendent Appleyard, who doesn't take kindly to Mr. Campion's interference, figures it's inevitable anyway and asks him to make discreet inquiries. Another round of circulating among the geochemist's colleagues and students, from Dr. J.K. Szmodics, head of Languages and Linguistics, and professor Yorick Thurible, head of Arts and Humanities, to Nigel Honeycutt, the mentee who openly attacked Pascual's politics, and Edwina Meade, Pascual's nosy cleaner, soon persuades Mr. Campion that "it's a wonder you haven't had a murder here long before now." Was the motive for the don's death the political causes over which USC students are demonstrating, the bevy of lovers he'd bedded, or the endless jockeying for those precious appointments to use the university's state-of-the-art 1970 computers? Fans of Ripley's pastiches (Mr Campion's War, 2018, etc.) will know better than to worry their heads about the crime and concentrate instead on every nuance of Mr. Campion's amusingly self-effacing blather, which this time finds its perfect counterpoint in the blather of the academics convinced they're all smarter than him.The solution is piffle, but that's appropriate to an outing that's all pifflesparkling, sublime piffle. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.