Miss Morton and the spirits of the underworld

Catherine Lloyd, 1963-

Book - 2023

Lady Caroline is happy to be back amid the swirl of London society, guiding her employer's daughter, Dorothy Frogerton, through her first Season. Dorothy has been declared "an original" by a patron of the exclusive social club, Almack's, and is sifting through potential suitors. Mrs. Frogerton, meanwhile, finds her own diversions, including spiritualist gatherings at the home of Madam Lavinia, and begs Caroline to come along. Caroline is skeptical of Madam's antics and faux French accent--until she slips a note into Caroline's hand, which contains intimate family knowledge. Even as Caroline tries to discern whether the spiritualist's powers are real, a much darker mystery presents itself. Madam Lavinia is ...found lifeless in her chair, a half-empty glass of port at her elbow. In her desk is a note addressed to Caroline, entreating her to find her murderer. Caroline needs no psychic abilities to determine a motive, for it seems that Madam was blackmailing some of her clients and has left a trail of aggrieved aristocrats behind. But as Caroline and Mrs. Frogerton investigate further, they find other suspects, and a litany of deceptions, some very close to home. Now Caroline will need to keep all her wits about her if she is to stop others from joining Madam Lavinia in the afterlife . . .

Saved in:

1st Floor Show me where

MYSTERY/Lloyd Catherin
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor MYSTERY/Lloyd Catherin Due Jan 9, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Historical fiction
Novels of manners
Cozy mysteries
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Kensington Publishing Corp 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Catherine Lloyd, 1963- (author)
Edition
First Kensington hardcover edition
Physical Description
241 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781496740618
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This lively historical cozy from Lloyd (a sequel to 2022's Miss Morton and the English House Party Murder) centers on Lady Caroline Morton, whose reduced financial and social circumstances in 1838 London have led her to become a paid companion to the irrepressible widow Mrs. Frogerton. When Mrs. Frogerton's interest in spiritualism brings the pair to the home of medium Madam Lavinia, Caroline is skeptical of the woman's powers. At the end of the evening, however, Lavinia passes Caroline a note containing intimate details about her childhood. A short time later, Caroline and her friend, Dr. Harris, return to Madam Lavinia's for a reading and find her murdered. Because the last people to see her alive were members of high society, the police are eager to pin the crime on someone of a lower social order, and they promptly arrest Dr. Harris. Caroline, following Mrs. Frogerton's lead, investigates in an attempt to clear Dr. Harris's name. The ladies' efforts are nicely balanced by their amusing asides with Dorothy Frogerton, the widow's daughter, who's determined to snag a titled husband. Numerous plausible suspects and perceptive observations on the period's social mores make this an entertaining entry in the series. More Morton mysteries would be welcome. Agent: Deirdre Knight, Knight Agency. (Sept.)

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

A lady's companion and her shrewd and curious employer take up sleuthing when a friend of theirs becomes a murder suspect. When Lady Caroline Morton and her sister, Susan, are left penniless by the death of their father, the Earl of Morton, Caroline becomes the companion to Mrs. Frogerton, whose money comes from trade and who hopes that the dowry for her beautiful daughter, Dorothy, may be large enough to arrange an aristocratic marriage. Their acquaintance Dr. Harris, who's taken a job in London, soon becomes a suspect in a murder investigation. Mrs. Frogerton, who's been attending séances at the home of Madam Lavinia Dubois, convinces the skeptical Caroline to join her at one. Among the guests are a masked young woman; the equally skeptical Professor Brown, who's doing a study on mesmerism and spiritualism; and others desperate to hear from loved ones. Caroline is shaken when Madam gives her a note with information about her that very few others would know. Dr. Harris offers to accompany her to another séance in order to judge Madam Lavinia's authenticity; there he meets Brown, who's a colleague of his. The event is interrupted by an irate Sir Alfred Fielding, who barges in to extract his mother, Lady Fielding. Harris tells Caroline that he needs to speak to Madam Lavinia privately and asks her to accompany him back to her house the next day--and when they arrive, they find the woman dead. Harris rifles through her desk and appropriates some papers, including letters addressed to both himself and Caroline. Provoked by the police, who fasten on Harris as Madam's most socially acceptable poisoner, the duo manage to fit snooping into their busy social schedule. If Madam was blackmailing some of her clients, the field of suspects is broad indeed. A charming combination of mystery, Regency romance, and social mores. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.