#TopTenTuesday Dynamic Detective Duos

Top Ten Tuesday new

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme created by The Broke and the Bookish and now hosted by Jana at That Artsy Reader Girl.

The rules are simple:

  • Each Tuesday, Jana assigns a new topic. Create your own Top Ten list that fits that topic – putting your unique spin on it if you want.
  • Everyone is welcome to join but please link back to That Artsy Reader Girl in your own Top Ten Tuesday post.
  • Add your name to the Linky widget on that day’s post so that everyone can check out other bloggers’ lists.
  • Or if you don’t have a blog, just post your answers as a comment.

This week’s topic is Dynamic Duos. I decided to concentrate on some detective duos who feature in one of my favourite genres – historical crime fiction. Links from the titles will take you to my review.

  1. Physician Nicholas Shelby and tavern owner Bianca Merton in S.W Perry’s series set in Elizabethan London published by Corvus – The Angel’s Mark, The Serpent’s Mark, The Saracen’s Mark and The Heretic’s Mark
  2. Doctor Will Raven and housemaid Sarah Fisher in Ambrose Parry’s series set in 19th century Edinburgh published by Canongate – The Way of All Flesh, The Art of Dying and A Corruption of Blood
  3. Undersheriff Hugh Bradecote and Sergeant Catchpoll in Sarah Hawkswood’s series set in 12th century Worcestershire published by Allison & Busby – Servant of Death, Ordeal by Fire, Marked to Die, Hostage to Fortune, Vale of Tears, Faithful Unto Death, River of Sins, Blood Runs Thicker and Wolf at the Door
  4. Barrister Arthur Skelton and his clerk Edgar Hobbes in David Stafford’s series published by Allison & Busby – Skelton’s Guide to Domestic Poisons and Skelton’s Guide to Suitcase Murders
  5. Amateur detectives Anna Drake and Shilly in Katharine Stansfield’s series set in 1840s Cornwall published by Allison & Busby – Falling Creatures, The Magpie Tree and The Mermaid’s Call
  6. Clerk to the King’s Justices Aelred Barling and his messenger Hugo Stanton in E.M. Powell’s series set in 12th century England published by Thomas & Mercer – The King’s Justice, The Monastery Murders and The Canterbury Murders
  7. Personal detective Sidney Grice and his ward March Middleton in M.R.C. Kasasian’s series set in 19th century London published by Head of Zeus – The Mangle Street Murders, The Curse of the House of Foskett, Death Descends on Saturn Villa, The Secrets of Gaslight Lane and Dark Dawn over Steep House
  8. Lawyer Matthew Shardlake and his assistant Jack Barak in C.J. Sansom’s series set in Tudor England published by  – Dissolution, Dark Fire, Sovereign, Revelation, Heartstone, Lamentation and Tombland
  9. Cambridge historian Ernest Drabble and newspaper reporter Sir Percival Harris in Alec Marsh’s series set in the 1930s published by Headline – Rule Britannia, Enemy of the Raj, Ghosts of the West
  10. Slightly cheating because they’re a trio, lady ‘detectors’ Emily, Anne and Charlotte Brontë in Bella Ellis’s series set in 1840s Yorkshire – The Vanished Bride, The Diabolical Bones and The Red Monarch

 


#BlogTour #BookReview The Mirror Game by Guy Gardner @RandomTTours @BookGuild

The Mirror Game BT PosterWelcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for The Mirror Game by Guy Gardner. My thanks to Anne at Random Things Tours for inviting me to take part in the tour and to The Book Guild for my digital review copy.


The Mirror Game CoverAbout the Book

London 1925. When Adrian Harcourt, a politician and captain in the army believed dead with his company on the battlefield of Flanders, is sighted looking like he’s been living rough, Harry Lark, a war veteran and journalist, is enlisted by his friend and benefactor Lady Carlise to investigate.

As he becomes drawn further into the case and the deaths mount up, he can see that things don’t add up. Where has Adrian been for so many years? Why can’t he remember parts of his past?

Looking further into Adrian’s previous life, even as his own dark past and addiction to laudanum threatens to overwhelm him, Harry begins to fall for Lady Carlise’s beautiful daughter Freddy, who was also Adrian’s fiancé.

Chasing the leads as they continue to unravel, can Harry solve the mystery behind what really happened to Adrian before it’s too late?

Format: Paperback (296 pages)         Publisher: The Book Guild
Publication date: 28th January 2022 Genre: Historical Fiction, Crime

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My Review

Reading the description of The Mirror Game suggests it has all the ingredients to make an enjoyable historical crime mystery – and it certainly succeeds on that score – but using the aftermath of the First World War as a backdrop to the story adds an additional element of interest, a darker tone if you like.

The lasting impact of the war is evident in many way, not just on those who survived or were injured but on the families of those who never returned or were reported missing in action. As Harry Lark says, ‘What did the hell did we expect to happen after it was over? We’d go on quietly living our lives, never minding the horror we were part of?’  Harry himself is a troubled man. He sustained physical injuries in the war which still cause him pain but it’s the mental scars more than anything that see him turn to laudanum to help him to forget the things he witnessed.

He finds a welcome new purpose in life when asked to investigate the mysterious reappearance of Adrian Harcourt after an absence of seven years. His journalistic instincts raise a series of questions in his mind. Why would someone who survived the war disappear and not return home? Where have they been for all that time? Why reappear now? What has caused the apparent change in them? I suspect I’m not the only reader to share Harry’s curiosity.

Harry makes a resourceful, resilient and feisty hero, and it soon becomes clear he will need all his wits about him (not to mention his fists) because the deeper he delves the more trouble seems to come his way – and anyone else he’s called upon for help. Why, he wonders, are people so anxious to stop him getting to the truth and what really happened in the battlefield incident during which Adrian Harcourt supposedly lost his life? Is there a cover-up aimed at hiding details of some atrocity or is something more sinister going on?

Alongside Harry’s investigation there’s a touching side story as he wrestles with his attraction to gifted musician Ferderica, the fiancé of the man he’s searching for. They seem simpatico but if he finds Adrian, won’t she want to pick up with him where they left off and what does Harry have to offer her anyway? When he looks in the mirror what does he see? A man fighting an addiction to laudanum, with no job and scarred by a previous relationship that ended in tragedy. Those who love a tortured hero will be urging Ferderica to go for it anyway – at least I was!

The plot moves along in double quick time and has more twists and turns than a corkscrew. Trust me, if you think you’ve got the solution to the mystery all worked out before the final pages you’ve probably got it wrong.

The Mirror Game is an extremely well-crafted, ingenious historical crime mystery. I don’t know if the author has more books featuring Harry Lark planned but I think he would make a great character to build a historical crime series around.

In three words: Intriguing, suspenseful, dramatic

Try something similar: Two Storm Wood by Philip Gray

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Guy Gardner Author PicAbout the Author

Guy Gardner is a professional jazz pianist, and has played both at home and around Europe in venues such as The National Theatre, Pizza Express Soho, the 02 and The Royal Albert Hall.

Having earned his degree in Music at Dartington College of Arts, he went on to gain a PGCE in teaching, which he used to teach in a prison for a time. Currently, he combines his writing with teaching piano in Dorset, where he lives with his wife, two young sons and dog.

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