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Cut to the Quick

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks

Julian Kestrel is the walking definition of a Regency-era dandy. He cares about little beyond the perfection of his tailoring, he lives for the bon mot, and his life has the specific gravity and the fleeting charm of a soap-bubble. At least that's what he'd like you to think. In fact, it rather suits Kestrel to be perpetually underestimated, particularly when as in this instance his weekend at a glamorous country estate is spoiled by a dead girl's body being found in his bed.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 1, 1993
      In its opening chapters, this mystery debut set in early 19th-century England reads like a promising Regency romance. Ruthless money-lender Mark Craddock has used ``dishonourable means'' to engineer the engagement of his daughter Maud to Sir Robert Fontclair's son Hugh. ``Howling swell'' Julian Kestrel has no plans for amateur sleuthing when he arrives at the Fontclair country home for the wedding, but the bride, aware that the groom is reluctant, asks Julian to help her foil Papa's scheme. Soon Julian uncovers a new problem tucked neatly into his own bed: a fully clothed young woman, dead of a stab wound, whom nobody in the household admits to recognizing. Sir Robert, a magistrate, seems content to pin the murder on Julian or his valet, Dipper, formerly a pickpocket, so Julian must find the real culprit. As soon as the corpse surfaces, this tale turns into a very decent whodunit. Julian is a dandy sleuth who manages to sort out both the murder and Maud's problem. However, Regency fans may be disappointed when social maneuverings are nudged aside by the crime investigation, while mystery lovers may resent having to wait several chapters for the first blood. Should Ross learn how to smoothly integrate these two genres in her next novel, she could earn a loyal audience.

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  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

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