"Clever British police procedural"
The elderly owner of Aumerle Court wheelchair bound Daphne
Pedlinge sees the corpse in the center of the estate's
Tudor maze from her observation perch in the long gallery
section of the manor house. Her staff calls the police and
County of Calleshire Detective Inspector C.D. Sloan arrives
to investigate. He notices that the estate steward Captain
Jeremy Prosser reacts quite peculiar upon seeing the dead
person through binoculars as if he knows something about
the victim. With Daphne's direction, C.D. reaches the
female corpse laid out like a sacrifice at the foot of the
statue of the Minotaur. While C.D. questions the staff at Aumerle Court, David
Collins reports his wife is missing. The police quickly
realize that she is the victim found dead in the maze.
However, C.D. cannot determine any motive or opportunity
for someone to kill the mother of a hospitalized child that
expected her to be with him. Fans of a British police procedural will want to read the
cleverly drawn AMENDMENT OF LIFE. The tale uses as a
backdrop an intriguing look at the changes to the
aristocracy in recent years. Though the secondary cast is
an interesting group that strengthens the fascinating story
line, this novel belongs to the" seedy" lead investigator.
Catherine Ard writes a pleasurable tale that the audience
will enjoy even as identifying the killer is as difficult
to achieve as completing the maze that contained the
deceased. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted December 14, 2002
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