Long Spoon Lane
by Anne Perry
Ballantine Books
March 29, 2005
ISBN #0345469275
336 pages
Hardcover
Add to TBR stack

Order:
Barnes & Noble.com


Other Books by
Anne Perry

Guest

Angels in the Gloom

Death Dines In

Death by Dickens

A Christmas Visitor

Much Ado About Murder

Shoulder the Sky

The Shifting Tide

Death by Dickens

A Christmas Journey

Come Armageddon

No Graves as Yet

Seven Dials

Much Ado about Murder

Death of a Stranger

Southampton Row

Funeral In Blue

REVIEW

"Terrific historical mystery"

By the summer of 1893, the English have become concerned with the bombing activities of the Anarchists who set explosions recently in London and Paris. A tip has come into the Special Branch, whose mission is to stop terrorists, claiming a bomb is set to go off in East London. Special Branch Chief Victor Narraway and Agent Thomas Pitt rush to the area; they capture two of the bombers. A third, a parliament member's son, is killed.

Pitt investigates the crime in an effort to learn who murdered the third prisoner. As he conducts an internal investigationt of the affairs of his office and the police as a whole, Pitt uncovers vast corruption with Bow Street Inspector Wetron of Bow Street seemingly as the untouchable chieftain protected by the highest levels of government. Meanwhile the media goes on a feeding frenzy demanding the arming of Bobbies and invoking patriotism insisting more power granted to law enforcement to intimidate suspected terrorists. Only a devil's deal with his enemy Sir Charles Voisey might stop Wetron from taking advantage of the public fervor, which seems to make this mastermind even more potent and deadly.

Highly regarded for her terrific historical mysteries, Anne Perry may have written her most relevant late nineteenth century police procedural in LONG SPOON LANE. The story line is action-packed from the moment the two Special Branch cops race to Myrdle Street to prevent a bombing and never slows down as the hero learns how deep corruption and greed extend in the force. Charlotte, Pitt's wife, plays a lesser role than she did in SEVEN DIALS, but no one will mind as the parallels of 1893 England to modern America is uncanny.

Harriet Klausner

Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted March 14, 2005




 

About Us | Frequently Asked Questions | Advertise | ParaNormalRomance Reviews | SensualRomance Reviews


© 2000-2008 writerspace.com
all rights reserved