Review
"Pyke returns in a gripping tale of brutal murder and deception, set in the back streets of Victorian London and the cane fields of Jamaica" (DEADLY PLEASURES )
'In its urgency and rawness... KILL-DEVIL AND WATER goes further than simply clever and diverting literary appropriation.' (Heather O'Donoghue TLS )
"Novel of the Week: A riproaring addition to the bestselling Pyke series" (PRESS ASSOCIATION )
'In its urgency and rawness... KILL-DEVIL AND WATER goes further than simply clever and diverting literary appropriation.' (Heather O'Donoghue TLS )
"Novel of the Week: A riproaring addition to the bestselling Pyke series" (PRESS ASSOCIATION )
Review
'In its urgency and rawness... KILL-DEVIL AND WATER goes further than simply clever and diverting literary appropriation.'
Review
"Novel of the Week: A riproaring addition to the bestselling Pyke series"
Book Description
Pyke returns in a gripping tale of brutal murder and deception, set in the back streets of Victorian London and the cane fields of Jamaica.
--This text refers to the
Paperback
edition.
Product Description
London: 1840. The economy is sliding into recession; gangs of unemployed workers roam the streets; the city is on the verge of anarchy and a murderer prowls the capital's poor neighbourhoods. Pyke, still grieving over the death of his wife and struggling to shoulder his responsibilities as a father, is in debtors' prison, having lost his home and reached the edge of bankruptcy. Fitzroy Tilling, now head of the new Metropolitan Police Force gives Pyke his freedom, but in return he must agree to investigate the brutal death of a young mulatto woman, recently arrived from Jamaica, and apparently working as a prostitute. Her body, found near the docks, has been viciously mutilated, but the police force are concentrating all their resources on the suspicious death of an influential aristocrat, and Pyke must therefore work alone. It is not long before another poor, young woman turns up dead, also mutilated and dumped by the river, and Pyke begins to suspect that he has stumbled on something more sinister, and more far-reaching than the murder of a couple of prostitutes. Torn between his duties as a father and his instincts as an investigator, between grief for his wife and desire for one of his suspects, Pyke's investigation takes him from the London docks to the sugar plantations of Jamaica, from a fading colonial mansion to the back-street pornography shops of the East End and from the sewers beneath the city to the vaults of the Bank of England, in a struggle against ambitious and ruthless enemies, as well as demons of his own.
About the Author
Andrew Pepper lives in Belfast where he is a lecturer in English at Queen's University.