"Great historical mystery"
In late 1850s London at the bequest of the Pinkerton
Group, Falcon reporter Edmund Whitty goes undercover to
expose psychic Dr. Gilbert Williams as a fake. Instead
shockingly his brother David seemingly contacts him from
the other side during a séance. David had been a highly
regarded scholar at Oxford who drowned during a rowing
race years earlier. At about the same time at Crouch Manor in Oxfordshire,
Reverend William Leffington Boltbyn loves to photograph
young girls; presently he is shooting two sisters Emma and
Lydia, daughters of the indifferent Revered Lambert who
either does not care what happens to his children or is
unaware of the threat his religious peer poses to them.
From the séance, Whitty begins to track his brother's
final days. Whitty becomes aware of the perilous situation
when he obtains a photograph of David in a compromising
position with someone who looks like Emma. That soon lead
the reporter to Oxfordshire and fears that a wolf in
sheep's clothing is using the pulpit to hide being a
pedophile, but to prove this could expose what he thinks
happened to darken the soul of his beloved late brother. WHITE STONE DAY, the sequel to the spellbinding THE FIEND
IN HUMAN, is a terrific Victorian investigative tale. The
delightful protagonist wonders if he really heard David
from beyond the grave (of course Edmund did not have the
Amazing Randi to debunk the psychic). Though he may
besmirch his sibling's name and he is losing his courage
with every step into the dark he takes, Whitty tries to
keep the Lambert siblings safe from a person he believes
is a human devil. Great historical mystery. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted October 13, 2005
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