Italian actors… French spies… At least the thugs are English… Charles Patterson is not happy. It’s the hottest June for years, he’s stuck in musical rehearsals with a family of Italians, some local ruffians are after his blood, and someone is trying to break into the house of Esther Jerdoun, the woman he loves. When a murder is discovered, he fears Esther may be next. It’s time to ask some tough questions. Who is the strange man masquerading under a false name? Are there spies abroad in Newcastle? Why is a psalm-teacher keeping vigil over a house in the town? And can Patterson find the murderer before he strikes again?
Roz Southey is a novelist and music historian living in the north-east of England. She lectures in music at Newcastle University, from which she gained a doctorate in 2002. She is acknowledged as the foremost authority on the historical and social contexts of eighteenth-century music-making in the north-east of England; her book on the subject - Music-Making in North-East England during the Eighteenth Century - was published by Ashgate in August 2006 and her papers have appeared in other academic publications. A childhood in the Lake District has left her with an enduring interest in local and family history; a book of her short articles on local history was published in 2008.
"An exciting page-turner set in Newcastle in the 18th century. ... You can see and smell the city, feel the mystery and tensions, and become drawn into the pursuit as the pace quickens. It remains absorbing to the end. ...characters are very well drawn and it is crammed with historical facts... It is a must-read for those who love historical fiction. There is also crime, mystery, romance, and a bit of science fiction thrown in." – Historical Novel Society
"Southey’s entertaining third 18th-century mystery ... vibrant characters, reminiscent of those in Beverle Graves Myers’s Tito Amato series, make this historical a rewarding read." – Publishers Weekly