The Seven Keys of Sara Seldon

by Edward J. Laurie


Formats

Softcover
£10.75
Softcover
£10.75

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 11/05/2001

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5x8
Page Count : 192
ISBN : 9780759624436

About the Book

After their adventures with murder in The Borgia Blade and A Little Pinch of Death, retired professor Simon Fraser and his young assistant, Tom McElrath, are sent on a treasure hunt to find the meaning of the seven keys left behind by the murdered Sara Seldon.

The keys arrived one day in a package along with a note from Sara that she probably would be murdered, and challenging the astute professor to find her killer. Sara died that very night, brought down by the blunt end of a shingle hatchet.

As usual, young Tom’s brother-in-law, Lieutenant Robert Campbell of the Ben Nevis Homicide Division, is sorely tried by the secretive nature of good friend Simon, who never tells all he knows until he’s certain of a satisfactory conclusion.

Thanks to membership in the Detective Club, the awe-inspiring Greek fortune-teller and seer, Millicent Zacharias, takes a formidable hand in the subsequent chase.

She sees things in the Eye of Imhotep that "ought not be seen," all of which confounds the pragmatic Lieutenant and his logical friend Prentice Dodd, to the continuing amusement of the more open-minded professor.


About the Author

I suppose all authors suffer under the illusion that they have something to say that other people might want to read. It’s an irrepressible disease, which does not fade over time, but grows stronger with any appreciation.

My mysteries were written to entertain my sister at a time when she happened to be home-bound and who, like me, is an inveterate mystery fan, particularly of the works of Agatha Christie and Rex Stout. Too, my mother, another serious mystery enthusiast, was always going to sit down and write a mystery story of her own concoction, but never did. I promised her, when I was young, that if she didn’t, I eventually would. She didn’t. I did -- five of them, as a matter of fact.

That ought to have been enough to assuage the writing infection, but it wasn’t. I’m currently in the middle of the generation of One Murder for Money.