Hardcastle's frustration

Book Cover
Average Rating
Publisher
Severn House
Publication Date
2012.
Language
English

Description

As the Great War grinds to its bloody finale, DI Hardcastle is encumbered with a frustrating and complicated investigation . . .  -March, 1918. The Great War is grinding slowly to its bloody finale.  Divisional Detective Inspector Ernest Hardcastle, head of the Whitehall Division of the Metropolitan Police, is called to a body is recovered from the Thames. Mavis Parker, the victim’s attractive widow, proves to be a good-time girl, and to complicate matters, all the suspects seem to be known to each other, including a South African who purports to be an actor. But it is when Special Branch intervene that things really get complicated . . .

More Details

ISBN
9780727881717
072788171

Discover More

Also in this Series

Checking series information...

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Kudos to Ison for keeping his Hardcastle and Marriott series fresh and thoroughly entertaining. Irascible curmudgeon Hardcastle and the long-suffering Sergeant Marriott are rarely baffled by a case, but their latest provides so many bizarre twists that it's no wonder the detective duo feels frustrated. A body, fished out of the Thames, is eventually identified as that of Ronald Parker, a clerk at a local gas company. But Parker was no model citizen. Not only did he leave behind a grieving widow, but his death also broke the heart of one Daisy Benson, a local tart. Was his murder a jealous wife's revenge? Too simple. As Hardcastle and Marriott investigate further, they learn that Parker's killing has lifted the lid on dark secrets related to the German government and the Great War, which is raging bloodily on the Continent. Hard-nosed coppers that they are, Hardcastle and Marriott think nothing can shock them, but when they finally unmask the killer, they are genuinely stunned. Meticulously researched historical details, period ambience, authentic British working-class dialogue, a splendid plot, gentle humor, and two clever detectives add up to an outstanding historical procedural.--Melton, Emily Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Powered by Syndetics

Publisher's Weekly Review

Set in March and April 1918, Ison's workmanlike 10th procedural featuring London Divisional Det. Insp. Ernest Hardcastle and Det. Sgt. Charles Marriott (after 2011's Hardcastle's Obsession) centers on the murder of Ronald Parker, a missing gas company employee, whose body is fished from the Thames with a bullet wound in the head. When Parker's widow, Mavis, hears the sad news, she asks whether his death occurred in Holland, claiming, unconvincingly, that he was heading there to avoid military conscription, despite his being medically exempt from service. A letter found on the corpse leads the police to Daisy Benson, the dead man's mistress, but before too long they realize Mavis had a possible motive for doing away with her spouse since she may have also strayed. Several plot twists make up in part for the somewhat plodding story line. Readers should be prepared for a lead who's less developed than similar irascible fictional Scotland Yarders. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Powered by Syndetics

Kirkus Book Review

As the Great War rages on, a corpse dumped in the Thames ends up in the bailiwick of Divisional DI Ernest Hardcastle and his colleagues at the Cannon Row station. Hardcastle can't help wishing that the late Ronald Parker, shot in the head and tied up in a sack, had floated past Waterloo Pier into someone else's jurisdiction. There are no obvious suspects or motives, and Hardcastle's sergeant, Charles Marriott, and his men (Hardcastle's Obsession, 2011, etc.) have plenty of other business to attend to. But things pick up with the news that Parker's mistress, Daisy Benson, neglected to tell him that she's been a widow for a year; that Parker himself, whose wife, Mavis, said he was about to leave for Holland to avoid conscription, had already been notified of his medical exemption from military service; and that Mavis Parker, a dayworker at the Sopwith Aviation paint shop, is quite the queen bee. Dogging the widow's footsteps, Hardcastle's coppers link her to Capt. Gilbert Stroud, dodgy corset salesman Lawrence Mortimer and actor Vincent Powers. In the fullness of time, Hardcastle realizes that this quiet wartime murder is politically sensitivea realization that's confirmed when he and his ham-handed squad are rebuked by Superintendent Patrick Quinn, who warns them off Special Branch's patch. Nothing daunted, Hardcastle, passed over for promotion in favor of a younger and less qualified colleague, ends up earning wry congratulations from the Chief Metropolitan Magistrate: "You seem to be making a habit of charging people with murder, Inspector." A middling procedural that's also a pleasingly efficient tour of 1918 London.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Powered by Syndetics

Booklist Reviews

Kudos to Ison for keeping his Hardcastle and Marriott series fresh and thoroughly entertaining. Irascible curmudgeon Hardcastle and the long-suffering Sergeant Marriott are rarely baffled by a case, but their latest provides so many bizarre twists that it's no wonder the detective duo feels frustrated. A body, fished out of the Thames, is eventually identified as that of Ronald Parker, a clerk at a local gas company. But Parker was no model citizen. Not only did he leave behind a grieving widow, but his death also broke the heart of one Daisy Benson, a local tart. Was his murder a jealous wife's revenge? Too simple. As Hardcastle and Marriott investigate further, they learn that Parker's killing has lifted the lid on dark secrets related to the German government and the Great War, which is raging bloodily on the Continent. Hard-nosed coppers that they are, Hardcastle and Marriott think nothing can shock them, but when they finally unmask the killer, they are genuinely stunned. Meticulously researched historical details, period ambience, authentic British working-class dialogue, a splendid plot, gentle humor, and two clever detectives add up to an outstanding historical procedural. Copyright 2012 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2012 Booklist Reviews.
Powered by Content Cafe

Publishers Weekly Reviews

Set in March and April 1918, Ison's workmanlike 10th procedural featuring London Divisional Det. Insp. Ernest Hardcastle and Det. Sgt. Charles Marriott (after 2011's Hardcastle's Obsession) centers on the murder of Ronald Parker, a missing gas company employee, whose body is fished from the Thames with a bullet wound in the head. When Parker's widow, Mavis, hears the sad news, she asks whether his death occurred in Holland, claiming, unconvincingly, that he was heading there to avoid military conscription, despite his being medically exempt from service. A letter found on the corpse leads the police to Daisy Benson, the dead man's mistress, but before too long they realize Mavis had a possible motive for doing away with her spouse since she may have also strayed. Several plot twists make up in part for the somewhat plodding story line. Readers should be prepared for a lead who's less developed than similar irascible fictional Scotland Yarders. (Sept.)

[Page ]. Copyright 2012 PWxyz LLC

Copyright 2012 PWxyz LLC
Powered by Content Cafe

Reviews from GoodReads

Loading GoodReads Reviews.

Staff View

Loading Staff View.