A Little Pinch of Death

by Edward J. Laurie


Formats

Softcover
£10.75
Softcover
£10.75

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 18/05/2001

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 232
ISBN : 9780759616103

About the Book

Simon Fraser and his young assistant, Tom McElrath are back again after their initial adventures in The Borgia Blade. Two beheadings, thirty years apart, send Professor Fraser and Tom on the trail of murder and adventure when they encounter the world’s most formidable medium, Millicent Zacharias, who would "scare hell out of Jack the Ripper."

There’s a séance murder, and yet another slaying. The final séance uncovers two further attempts at murder.

Are there two killers or only one? Is one of the older crowd guilty? Or perhaps there’s a killer amongst the young? Is there an avenging child about? What did the doctor know that was so dangerous? Why the sudden change from saber to poison?

Some of Simon’s university colleagues are involved, most particularly, a much-despised colleague of yesteryear. "If only I could prove Roland Jepson did the dirty deeds, I’d cheerfully see him fried," says an irritated Simon.

As usual, the sore-tried but patient Lieutenant Campbell has to put up with his good friend’s penchant for maddening secrets, but in the end, the shadows fade and Simon, "does it again," as he did in the case of The Borgia Blade.


About the Author

Probably the less said about the author, the better. The story and the characters should rule.

But, of course, an author is at least four beings: the person he thinks he is, the person he would like to be, the person his friends believe they know, and the person he remembers of long ago.

Simon Fraser, at 74, carries the triple burden as an amalgamation of the person I am, wish I was, and my friends believe me to be, a retired professor dolled up by a host of fictional liberties and unearned attributes.

Tom McElrath is myself long ago, at 24, both the flippant reality and the past seen through glasses tainted pink by time and rosy remembrance.

The other characters are made up of the bits and pieces of people I’ve encountered, but so assembled so as to be, in sum, fictional. However, as with real people in real places doing real things, these fancied folk, once created, have a way of going in their own independent directions. That’s what makes writing entertaining.

One may start a mystery with a plot, but can never be quite certain at the beginning how things will turn out in the end.