Death in a Scarlet Coat
By (Author) David Dickinson
Little, Brown Book Group
Robinson Publishing
20th December 2001
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
352
Width 128mm, Height 197mm, Spine 23mm
280g
Master of the Hunt, the fifteenth Earl of Candlesby, has come to lead his riders once again. But this time he comes as a corpse, wrapped in blankets across his horse, a corner of his scarlet coat visible in the morning mist. Only three people see the body. One dies. Another vanishes. Now only one man knows how he was killed. Powerscourt is summoned to investigate murder in a crumbling house where the paper is peeling off the walls and the stuffed owls each only have one leg.
The estate is virtually bankrupt as Powerscourt uncovers a world of jealousy, revenge and hatred, where the sons are as dissolute and dangerous as the father. The fifteenth earl had left a trail of duels, theft and adultery across the flatlands of Lincolnshire. It takes another death and a deadly chase under the crumbling estate before Powerscourt unlocks the secret of death in a scarlet coat.Praise for David Dickinson:'Splendid entertainment' Publishers Weekly'Detective fiction in the grand style' James Naughtie'Beguilingly real from start to finish... you have to pinch yourself to remind you that it is fiction - or is it' Peter Snow'Dickinson's customary historical tidbits and patches of local colour swathed in... appealing Victorian narrative' Kirkus ReviewsSplendid entertainment. - Publishers Weekly
Detective fiction in the grand style. - James NaughtieBeguilingly real from start to finish... you have to pinch yourself to remind you that it is fiction - or is it - Peter SnowDickinson's customary historical tidbits and patches of local colour swathed in ... appealing Victorian narrative. - Kirkus ReviewsWith a first class honours degree in Classics from Cambridge, David Dickinson joined the BBC, where he became editor of Newsnight and Panorama as well as series editor on Monarchy. His novel Death of a Chancellor was longlisted in 2007 for Theakston's Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year.