Amazon.co.uk Review
What's more, the Inspector's partner Barbara Havers has been suspended and is facing criminal charges of assault and attempted murder. Was Havers really saving a drowning child or was she disobeying orders? Why then did she fire a rifle at the Detective Chief Inspector and how could Lynley ethically justify it? As he grapples with the ramifications of his partner's radical insubordination, the case in Derbyshire grows in daunting complexity.
Once again, Elizabeth George delivers an intricately woven plot which efficiently navigates the reader through the book's 566 pages. Along the way, readers will be introduced to a delightful cast of supporting characters, from the dowdy Phoebe who finds the first gory cadaver to the stately Andy Maiden: "His face was drawn with exhaustion, and his growth of peppery whiskers fanned out from his moustache and shadowed his cheeks". And, of course, fans will get an eyeful of George's trademark; her vivid descriptions of death: "At her feet, a young man lay curled like a foetus, dressed head-to-toe in nothing but black, with that same colour puckering burnt flesh from eye to jaw on one side of his face". --Rebekah Warren --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Review
'She is a great storyteller. The totality is a big fat, satisfying book.' (Frances Fyfield, Sunday Express )
'A compelling mystery,intricately plotted, with multiple twists and a satisfyingly devious finale. George is brilliant at juggling so many motives and so many suspects, keeping the reader enthralled, and coming up with such a clever solution.' (Marcel Berlins, The Times )
'George's nine best-selling novels of psychological suspense are burnished with the internationalism that is a result of dividing her time between California and London' (The Times )
Time Out
Entertainment Weekly
The Times
Publishers Weekly
Frances Fyfield Express on Sunday
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About the Author
Excerpted from In Pursuit of the Proper Sinner by Elizabeth George. Copyright © 2000. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved
Samantha had come to Derbyshire with just that intention eight months previously, an angel of mercy who'd one day shown up at Broughton Manor with the mission of reuniting a family torn asunder for more than three decades. She hadn't made much progress in that direction, however, and Julian wondered how much longer she was going to put up with his father's bent towards the bottle. 'We've got to get him off the booze, Jules,' Samantha had said to him only that morning. 'you must see how crucial it is at this point.' Nicola, on the other hand, knowing his father eight years and not merely eight months, had long been of a live-and-let-live frame of mind. She'd said more than once, 'If your dad's choice is to drink himself silly, there's nothing you can do about it, Jules. And there's nothing that Sam can do either.' But then Nicola didn't know how it felt to see one's father slipping ever more inexorably towards debauchery, absorbed in intensely inebriated delusions about the romance of his past She, after all, had grown up in a home where how things seemed was identical to how things actually were. She had two parents whose love never wavered, and she'd never suffered the dual desertion of a flower-child mother flitting off to 'study' with a tapestry-clad guru the night before one's own twelfth birthday and a father whose devotion to the bottle far exceeded any attachment he might have displayed towards his three children. In fact, had Nicola ever once cared to analyse the differences in their individual upbringings, Julian thought, she might have seen that every single one of her bloody decisions At that, he brought his thoughts up short. He would not head in that direction. He could not afford to head in that direction. He could not afford to let his mind wander from the task that was immediately at hand. 'Listen to me.' He grabbed his wallet from the chest and shoved it into his pocket. 'You're good enough for anyone. She got scared shitless. She took a wrong turn. That's the end of it. Remember that. And remember that everyone knows how good the two of you always were together.' He had faith in this fact. Nicola Maiden and Julian Britton had been part of each other's lives for years. Everyone who knew them had long ago realised that they belonged together. It was only Nicola who, it appeared, had never come to terms with this fact. 'I know that we were never engaged,' he'd told her two nights
previously in response to her declaration that she was moving away from the Peaks permanently and would only be back for brief visits henceforth. 'But we've always had an understanding, haven't we? I wouldn't be sleeping with you if I wasn't serious about. Come on, Nick. Damn it, you know me.' It wasn't the proposal of marriage he'd planned on making, and she hadn't taken it as such. She'd said-bluntly, 'Jules, I like you enormously. You're terrific, and you've been a real friend. And we get on, far better than I've ever got on with another bloke.' 'Then you see 'But I don't love you,' she went on. 'Sex doesn't equate to love. It's only in. films and books that it does.' He'd been too stunned at first to speak. It was as if his mind had become a blackboard and someone had taken a rubber to it before he had a chance to make any notes. So she'd continued.