Kate Griffin
A GRISLY murder in one of her own ‘palaces’ isn’t the only
dark shadow hanging over the life of Kitty Peck, owner of a business ‘empire’
and darling of the East End’s music halls. With a powerful and brutal cartel on her tail, and a rabid,
ranting preacher determined to rain fire and brimstone on Kitty and all she
holds dear, the settled future she longs for is looking decidedly perilous.
Welcome back to late Victorian England, a place of penetrating
fog, ferocious villains, foul deeds and filth, and one that has been brought to
vivid, visceral life in a gripping and atmospheric historical crime series by
Kate Griffin.
Griffin was raised on her grandmother’s tales of London’s
Limehouse in the 1890s, a tough suburb where Jack the Ripper had stalked the
streets just a decade earlier, so it’s little wonder that she has been seduced
by this area’s dark mysteries, and the fourth and final book in her gritty but
exhilarating debut series returns to the murkiest and most malignant corners of
the East End.
And no business could be more disreputable than the
Paradise, the sprawling empire on the banks of the Thames left to teenager
Kitty by her grandmother, Lady Ginger, a fearless, ferocious woman who turned
out to be one of the East End’s Barons, an unscrupulous group of powerful
people hooked up to ‘every foul trade and noxious game’ in the city.
TERRIFIC SERIES: Kate Griffin |
In Kitty’s last performance, we find the young woman known
as the Limehouse Linnet disillusioned with her grand schemes to make her three
music halls ‘a cleaner place for the poor types who came with the dirty trades.’ She had thought she would be able to run her grandmother’s
criminal empire her own way.
What Kitty didn’t know was that her grandmother
had also left her violently entwined with the Barons, a coterie of unsavoury
characters in high places who will stop at nothing to gain power, and who have
carried out a string of murders to frighten Kitty.
Spurred on by her friends and newspaper reporter Sam
Collins, the man she loves, Kitty is still determined to do away with the dark
underbelly of Paradise and to transform her music halls into the jewels of
Limehouse.
But as she begins her final assault on the evil Barons, a
new threat appears in the form of the Reverend William Auchlyne-Doune, an
eerily charismatic preacher on a crusade against ‘wickedness and vice’ and with
his sights set on Kitty. Can she save Paradise from destruction, without losing any
more of the people she loves?
Griffin’s hard-hitting gothic mysteries are brimming with
breathtaking historical detail, and are the nearest a contemporary audience
could get not just to the squalor and depravity of the city’s poorest quarters
but to the people who lived there and plied their often dubious trades.
Click here for LANCASHIRE POST review
Click here for LANCASHIRE POST review
And this terrific series signs off in fine form as Kitty,
with her razor-sharp brain and wits, street-wise common sense and extraordinary
courage battles to keep one step ahead of those who would willingly see her
dead.
The cruel, dangerous and unforgiving world Kitty inhabits is
evoked with thrilling authenticity and the richest period detail as her last
offensive against the terrifying foes seeking to shut down her empire springs
to life in an all-action, high-octane adventure. A brilliant last curtain call from an author with her feet
planted firmly in the past…
(Faber & Faber, paperback, £8.99)
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