Charlotte Vassell
THE discovery of a woman’s body floating face down in the
Thames is just the start of a police investigation that will open up two cold
cases.
With a two-pronged missing persons mystery to solve – and
the romantic frissons of a new relationship bringing a welcome distraction – Detective
Inspector Caius Beauchamp will need all the help he can get from his trusty
murder investigation team.
If you like your crime mysteries to have all the complex
detective work and exquisitely drawn characters of Agatha Christie, but with an
original and insightful voice, an acidly satirical edge, and a decidedly 21st
century vibe, then treat yourself to the second of Charlotte Vassell’s fun,
original and entertaining whodunit series.
And after the runaway success of her debut novel, The Other Half, Vassell (pictured below) delivers another gripping, high-energy police procedural mystery set within a London super-rich and powerful milieu in which only a chosen few born into staggering wealth can comfortably exist, and which is pretty much unimaginable to the ‘oiks’ who live on the other side of the class divide. It’s a tale of two worlds rubbing shoulders, full of wickedly incisive social commentary, plenty of twists and turns, and a cast of goodies and baddies that could only have been conjured up by a writer who also trained to tread the boards.
A men’s rowing team discovered the body and the drowning
appears to be a tragic accident until Detective Caius Beauchamp gets an
unexpected tip. It seems the victim, Lynne Rodgers, had enemies in high places,
so did being on the wrong side of them get her killed?
Many years before, the chief executive of a clothing
manufacturer walked off with a multi-million dollar corporate retirement fund
and disappeared without a trace. But finding Lynne’s body has reopened that
cold case.
Meanwhile, Caius has his own evening at the theatre – and an
auspicious meeting with beautiful young society milliner Calliope (Callie)
Foster – turned upside down by the discovery of a dead body just a few seats
away. Martin Hartley was an amateur sleuth who was investigating the mysterious
disappearance two decades ago of Eliza Chapel, a 14-year-old student at a girls’
boarding school in Cornwall. It means a second cold case will have to be reopened.
As Caius – along with his chirpy fellow officers, DS Matt Cheung and DC Amy Noakes – investigates these parallel missing persons cases, he soon finds himself ensnared in the
unexpected political machinations of a duke-in-waiting, and the fully expected bad behaviour of London’s rich and powerful upper class.Vassell’s addictive murder mystery plunges readers into a world of haves and have nots as she explores some of high society’s dark and rancid corners whilst fearlessly puncturing the pretensions, entitlement and conceit of the British class system, and exquisitely nailing the faux manners and mores of the filthy rich. And what a clever, complex story of tangled secrets, privilege, excess and corruption this is, unfolding seamlessly through the sharpest writing and an entertaining blend of descriptive language, lively dialogue and an irresistible brand of sardonic humour.
Alternating between the perspectives of the thoroughly
likeable and very moral Caius and the delightful new-girl-on-the block-Callie,
The In Crowd is both caustically funny and refreshingly different, serving up
familiar tropes like red herrings, intriguing suspects and plot twists with
wit, style and moments of unexpected high emotion. Add on a team of charismatic detectives with a fine line in
banter and you have a clever concoction of crime fiction with a side serving of
satire!
(Faber & Faber, hardback, £16.99)
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