Babyface
By (Author) Elizabeth Woodcraft
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperCollins
18th December 2002
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Crime and mystery: women sleuths
Crime and mystery: private investigator / amateur detectives
Adventure / action fiction
Humorous fiction
Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
Narrative theme: Love and relationships
Narrative theme: Social issues
823.92
Paperback
432
Width 111mm, Height 178mm, Spine 27mm
228g
Second in the sparky crime series featuring Tamla Motown-loving barrister Frankie Richmond. Barrister and sometime detective Frankie Richmond has never been any good at saying no -- a fatal weakness that always leads to big trouble. In Birmingham for a child abuse inquiry, Frankie reluctantly agrees to fill in at a corpseless murder trial for one day only. But walking away from a juicy crime brief was never going to be easy. Especially when the defendant's girlfriend, who begs her for help to prove his innocence, is Frankie's idea of gorgeous. Soon she knows far more about the Birmingham underworld -- and the leather sofa business -- than is sensible for someone who's off the case. Add to that a spot of breaking and entering, joy riding and bullet dodging and Frankie needs to track down the real murderer fast -- if there's been a murder at all. Frankie's chaotic approach to crime solving whistles along to the strains of Joe Cocker and the Four Tops in this follow up to Motown murder mystery Good Bad Woman.
Praise for Good Bad Woman: 'An unchained medley of love, loss, laughter and the law' Val McDermid 'A thriller that doesn't just portray the legal system accurately, but is sparklingly written, with believable dialogue and a lively plot ... I hope Woodcraft writes more' Marcel Berlins, Guardian 'Frankie Richmond is a great creation -- more please' Cath Staincliffe, Manchester Evening News 'An unusual and compelling London-based mystery with the bonus of a Motown soundtrack' Jim Driver, Time Out 'A winner' The Times
Elizabeth Woodcraft attended Birmingham University and graduated with a degree in Philosophy. She has been a Barrister since 1980. After university she taught English in Leicestershire and then lived in France for a year, in the Loire Valley. On her return she worked for the National Womens Aid Federation and subsequently read for the Bar. During her time at the Bar she has represented Greenham Common Peace Protesters, Anti Apartheid demonstraters, striking miners and Clause 28 activists, as well as battered women, children who have suffered sex abuse in and out of their homes and gay parents seeking parental rights