Book Review – The House at Devil’s Neck by Tom Mead

Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The House at Devil’s Neck by Tom Mead, the latest in the crime series featuring illusionist and solver of seemingly insoluble mysteries, Joseph Spector. My thanks to Eleanor at Ransom PR for inviting me to take part in the tour and for my proof copy. Do check out the review by my tour buddy for today, Jen at Jen Med’s Book Reviews.

About the Book

A former First World War field hospital, the spooky old mansion at Devil’s Neck attracts spirit-seekers from far and wide.

Illusionist-turned-sleuth Joseph Spector knows the house of old. With stories spreading of a phantom soldier making mischief, he joins a party of visitors in search of the truth.

But the house, located on a lonely causeway, is quickly cut off by floods. The stranded visitors are soon being killed off one by one.

With old ally Inspector Flint working on a complex case that has links to Spector’s investigation, the two men must connect the dots before Devil’s Neck claims Spector himself as its next victim.

Format: Hardcover (288 pages) Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 14th August 2025 Genre: Historical Fiction, Crime

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My Review

The House at Devil’s Neck contains all the ingredients of a ‘Golden Age’ crime novel including a host of suspicious deaths, an inheritance and multiple suspects, some of whom may not be exactly who they profess to be. Add an enormous number of twists and unexpected reveals and you have a mystery that will confound every attempt to solve it – unless you’re Joseph Spector, of course.

The author introduces an air of the supernatural by setting the book in a sinister old manor house – the Devil’s Neck of the title – accessible only by a causeway when the tide is right and reputed to be haunted. It’s certainly haunted by its past use as a hospital for soldiers wounded in the First World War, many of whom suffered lifechanging disfigurement. The perfect place for a seance then. This strand of the story reflects the interest in spiritualism at the time with many grieving relatives seeking to make contact from beyond the grave with loved ones killed in the war. Unfortunately this made them easy prey for the unscrupulous.

Spector’s old ally Inspector Flint of Scotland Yard returns, attempting to use Spector’s own methods to come up with a solution to a mysterious and, initially, seemingly unconnected death in that staple of classic crime – the locked room which no-one was seen to enter or leave. Will Spector be impressed with his theory? The reader must wait to see.

I’m not even going to attempt to summarise the twists and turns of the plot, which would be beyond me in any case. All I will say is that the author has outdone himself when it comes to intricate plotting and I pity the copy editor who had to make sure there were no loose ends.

Like previous novels in the series, there’s a chapter near the end which invites the reader to put all the facts together and come up with a solution. (Good luck with that.) There are also footnotes directing you back to the page on which a relevant piece of information appeared. Or more realistically, the pages on which the pieces of information you totally overlooked appeared. If you indentified the culprit, the motive and the means before Spector revealed everything then all I can say is you’re a much, much cleverer person than me. Even if you didn’t solve the mystery, it’s a fun ride in the hands of an author who knows how to keep a reader turning the pages.

If you’re in the mood for a book that evokes those doyennes of the ‘Golden Age’ crime novel Agatha Christie and Dorothy L. Sayers, then The House at Devil’s Neck is the book for you. Just don’t blame me if your brain is in a spin by the end.

In three words: Ingenious, atmospheric, intricate
Try something similar: Hemlock Bay by Martin Edwards

About the Author

Tom Mead is a Derbyshire author and Golden Age crime aficionado. His Joseph Spector crime novels include Death and The ConjurorThe Murder Wheel and Cabaret Macabre and have been nominated for the Capital Crime Award for Debut Novel of the Year, shortlisted for the Historical Writers’ Association Debut Crown and long listed for the CWA Historical Dagger Award. His short stories have appeared in Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine and Best Crime Stories of the Year (edited by Lee Child). His books have been named as crime novels of the year by the likes of The Guardian, Telegraph and Publishers Weekly. (The series has been translated into several languages and is currently in development for screen adaptation.)

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Book Review – Lion Hearts by Dan Jones

About the Book

Three years on from the Siege of Calais: The Black Death has wreaked havoc in Europe. The Castilians are moving against England. The Essex Dogs have scattered.

In Winchelsea, Loveday struggles to keep his tavern afloat in the aftermath of the Death. Nowadays, the only battles he fights are the ones within his own mind.

In Windsor, Romford thrives as a squire at King Edward III’s court, his days as an archer fading into memory. But when an unpaid debt threatens everything he’s built, Romford must call upon the lessons he learned all those years ago: be cunning. Be ruthless. Be quick.

With England still reeling from the Death and the Castilian threat on the rise, the kingdom’s future has never been more uncertain.

Each had reasons for leaving the Essex Dogs behind. But a life like that isn’t so easily forgotten. And for these men the fighting isn’t over yet.

Format: Hardcover (384 pages) Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 31st July 2025 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

I absolutely loved the previous two books in this series – Essex Dogs and Wolves of Winter – which is set during the Hundred Years’ War. So I was excited to be reunited with the Essex Dogs, or to be more accurate, what remain of the Essex Dogs since quite a few have fallen by the wayside over the course of the books, either confirmed dead or gone missing.

As far as the Essex Dogs are concerned, they number just four: Loveday FitzTalbot, Millstone, Thorp and their newest recruit, Thorp’s nephew, the unpredictable Rigby. The reader knows there’s one other survivor of the original crew – Romford, who’s left behind his wild drink and drug-fuelled days to become squire to Sir Thomas de Holand. But could there be another comrade out there who’s cheated death once again?

As the book opens the Essex Dogs’ erstwhile leader, Loveday, has decided his fighting days are over. He’s now landlord of the Green Lion inn in Winchelsea which he runs with the help of a woman with a young son. Unfortunately he’s bought a pig in a poke because the building is falling apart, the roof leaks and it turns out there were dodgy roofers even in the 14th century. Add to that, an ordinance passed after the Black Death forbids paying a labourer over the odds for work, even if you’ve got the money. And anyway most of the skilled craftsman are busy building ships for the Navy, England being in a longstanding tussle with the Castilians who have been intercepting English merchant ships loaded with cloth.

When Loveday is approached by someone willing to bankroll the work he has no option but to accept. We all know there’s no such thing as a free lunch though and the ‘help’ comes with some risky obligations. Fortunately his former comrades, Millstone and Thorp, have just returned from a fruitless mission and are looking for their next job. Unfortunately, Rigby’s there too, a young man who can’t help getting into trouble.

Meanwhile Romford has found himself unofficial banker to the debt-laden Sir Thomas de Holand who is still waiting for the King to pay out the ransom for the Count of Eu, the French nobleman Sir Thomas captured on the battlefield. Unfortunately for Sir Thomas, his wife has expensive tastes. Joanie is one of the book’s most colourful characters. In real life known as ‘The Fair Maid of Kent’ (although not at the time), in the author’s hands she’s a boozy, foul-mouthed flirt but utterly entertaining. I was also pleased to see the return of the Earl of Northampton, unparelled when it comes to imaginative cursing all of which are too crude to reproduce here. (Rigby learns some pretty fruity Castilian ones as well, translated at the end of the book.)

Eventually all roads lead to Winchelsea for the epic final scenes. As in the previous books, the Essex Dogs find themselves caught up in events that are rooted in historical fact. In this case, it’s the so-called Battle of Winchelsea in which an English fleet of ships took on a Castilian fleet of much larger ships. Some of the seemingly ludicrous events described actually happened. For example King Edward, his knights and nobles really did sit on the deck of his flagship listening to minstrels playing until the very last moment before the enemy fleet was sighted. And the clifftops near Winchelsea really were lined with spectators watching the battle unfold.

The Essex Dogs have always been ruthless fighters, plying their trade to whoever can pay without much consideration for the morality of their actions. Not to say that hasn’t had consequences because there are things you can’t forget you’ve seen – or done. They owe their lives to each other but you can only escape death so many times before it catches up with you. I’ll freely admit there are scenes at the end that left me tearful. (Rather inconvenient since I was on a train at the time.)

I absolutely loved Lion Hearts. It kept me enthralled from start to finish. The book is billed as ‘the unmissable conclusion to the Essex Dogs trilogy’ yet a sentence at the end of the book- no spoilers – left me wondering…

I received a review copy courtesy of Head of Zeus via NetGalley.

In three words: Gripping, authentic, action-packed
Try something similar: To Kill a King by David Gilman

About the Author

Dan Jones is the Sunday Times and New York Times bestselling author of many non-fiction books, including The PlantagenetsThe Templars and Powers and Thrones. He is a renowned writer, broadcaster and journalist. He has presented dozens of TV shows, including the Netflix series Secrets of Great British Castles, and writes and hosts the podcast This is History. His debut novel, Essex Dogs, is the first in a series following the fortunes of ordinary soldiers in the early years of the Hundred Years’ War. He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.

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