"Well done Victorian who-done-it"
In Victorian England, Sir Edmund Leggett is so in debt he
is marrying heiress Beatrice Parkingtom for her money even
with her parents in trade and the chit not wanting to
marry him. A woman stalks Edmund hanging outside his home
every day and follows him wherever he goes. Afraid that
his cash cow will cry off if she learns about the stalker,
Edmund announces their engagement at a society gala so she
cannot dump him. Later a drunken Edmund heads home;
someone he knows shoots him and calmly walks away leaving
him dead. Inspector Gerald Witherspoon is assigned the case and
finds too many suspects with motives as Sir Edmund played
fast and loose with women, abused his servants, and was
late paying off his gambling debts. Even his fiancée
loathed him and the female stalker is assumed to have been
one of the many women he discarded. The inspector worries
that this will become a cold case, but his housekeeper
Mrs. Jeffries and the rest of his household staff are
helping him although he remains unaware of their
assistance. The nineteenth installment in this long running series
retains its fresh, unique "police procedural" premise due
to a terrific who-done-it, the fabulous Witherspoon and
his unofficial experts, and a solid secondary cast loaded
with reasons to kill Edmund. Although his nasty behavior
provides much of London as suspects, perhaps the only weak
link is the odious Edmund, who was so nasty and hedonistic
that no one cares that he died. However, what makes this
well done who-done-it shine even brighter is the vivid
look at Victorian England from the perspective of several
lifestyles. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted September 10, 2004
SummarySir Edmund Leggett is flattered to be stalked by a young
lady--who makes herself scarce after he's murdered in cold
blood. The police hold the young woman to blame. But
Inspector Witherspoon has other ideas and consults his
housekeeper, Mrs. Jeffries--who always gets to the heart
of
the matter.
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