"Great historical mystery"
A young child, no bigger than eight, is fished out of the
Thames River in London of 1774. When Sir John Fielding of
4 Bow Street, the magistrates of London and Winchester
hears of this, he sends his protégée Jeremy Proctor to
investigate. A month ago Alice Plummer reported her
daughter was stolen and Sir John thinks that the child in
the water was Margaret Plummer. When Jeremy arrives on the
docks, he learns that the child was naked and there is
evidence of sexual intercourse. The autopsy reveals that the child was indeed brutally
molested and smothered to death. When Jeremy tries to find
the mother, a neighbor says that she disappeared with a
large sum of money after giving her child to a man that
said he would place her with wealthy parents who couldn't
have a child. When Jeremy and Alice's brother Deuteronomy,
a famous jockey, manage to locate Alice in Newmarket she is
honestly horrified to find out what happened to her child.
She manages to give the authorities the slip and take
justice into her own hands but Sir John and Jeremy are
determined to find the man who actually killed the child
and bring him to justice. Historical mysteries don't get better than THE PRICE OF
MURDER. The story is told in the first person narrative
from Jeremy's perspective years after the events of this
novel have taken place. His asides to the audience are
thoroughly entertaining and make the readers feel as if
they are part of the tale. Depending on how one feels
about animals, justice was not meted out totally by a human
agent. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted September 5, 2003
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