A sword, a book of music, and a murdered girl… Musician-sleuth Charles Patterson is called to a murder late one night – and is horrified to find he is acquainted with the victim, a young street-girl. There is little Patterson can do; his patron has arranged an engagement for him at a fashionable house party some miles away and he must leave early next morning. But where Patterson goes, trouble is never far behind. A chance meeting with an American at the house party raises new questions about the murder – then he is attacked twice for no apparent reason. And his personal life, in the form of Esther Jerdoun, the wealthy woman he loves against all of society’s conventions, is becoming more and more complicated… 4th in the Charles Patterson series, set in early 18th century Newcastle.
Roz Southey is a novelist and music historian living in the north-east of England. She is the author of the Charles Patterson mysteries, a series of historical detective novels set in Newcastle upon Tyne in the eighteenth century. 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.
“Southey creates a feeling of time and place that is vivid and realistic without being overwhelmingly detailed. She draws us into the story’s setting but doesn’t hit us over the head with it. A fine period mystery.” --David Pitt.
“Southey impeccably evokes the period, and the latest twist in Charles's unlikely romance will leave readers eager for the next installment.” - Publishers Weekly
"With hints of the paranormal, this unusual historical series just keeps getting better ... For readers who like a bit of the unusual." - Library Journal (Starred Review)