#GuestPost The Case of the Emigrant Niece by David Cairns of Finavon

I’m delighted to welcome author David Cairns of Finavon to What Cathy Read Next today to talk about his latest book, The Case of the Emigrant Niece, the first in a new series of historical mysteries featuring 19th century Scottish engineer, Findo Gask. David has written a fascinating guest post about the inspiration for the book and about the ‘freedom to explore’ that writing historical fiction brings him.

The Case of the Emigrant Niece will be published as en ebook on 1st December 2022 and is available for pre-order now.


The Case of the Emigrant Niece coverAbout the Book

A multiple murderer on the loose, an inheritance stolen

Injured at the start of the Indian mutiny in 1858, Scotsman Findo Gask finds himself in Melbourne during the fabled Gold Rush where he stumbles across the mystery of a stolen inheritance. Captivated by the pretty heiress, together with his new idiosyncratic friend, Erroll Rait he begins to investigate for her, travelling back to London, Edinburgh, the Scottish highlands and then to Melbourne again, uncovering multiple murders before falling foul of a sinister plot to add himself and his client to the list of victims.

Taking readers back to the days of steam trains and clipper ships, gas-lit Edinburgh streets and the goldfields of Australia with the unravelling of a mystery and the discovery of a relentless murderer, The Case of the Emigrant Niece is a spellbinding novel that captures the imagination and transports you back to a different age.

Format: ebook (437 pages)                 Publisher: Finavon Press
Publication date: 1st December 2022 Genre: Historical Fiction, Mystery

Pre-order/purchase link
Amazon UK
Link provided for convenience only, not as part of an affiliate programme


Guest Post – The Case of the Emigrant Niece by David Cairns of Finavon

This is a story I promised to myself several years ago when I was driving from Perth (in Scotland) to Glasgow.  Swooping down the A9 into the fertile glen that Macbeth would have traversed hundreds of years earlier, I passed a signpost to Findo Gask – a small village off the A9 running by the River Earn – and the name struck me immediately as ideal for a swashbuckling hero.  A little later that month I was driving to Dundee and again was struck by a signpost (literally, not figuratively), this time to the villages of Errol and Rait.  Snap.  Another name – this time conjuring up Errol Flynn of course.  They sat at the back of my mind for several years and then, having completed my Helots’ Tale series I took the plunge and brought them to life, with Findo Gask and Erroll Rait meeting up on opposite sides of a cricket match in colonial Melbourne in November, 1858. I set the story in the mid 19th century for a number of reasons. I had spent almost three years researching and writing The Helots’ Tale series, which was set in the early to mid-1800s, so I was already embedded in the period, had a lot of research sources and, well, it felt like unfinished business.

The storyline came about after a Board meeting when I was considering the trust placed by us all in our lawyers. And I started to think, “What if?”.  I hasten to add that I do not subscribe to that line in Shakespeare’s Henry VI, “The first thing we do, let’s kill all the lawyers”.  I have good friends of high integrity who are lawyers and besides, if we start there, how long before they come after the accountants? (which is my original qualification, although it’s been a long time since I juggled the debits and credits for a living).

I have written poetry and short stories but the Emigrant Niece is my first full-length work of fiction. Previous novels have been true stories rounded out with imagined conversations and likely or at least possible events.  There is something very fulfilling about bringing to life people whom you know only as entries in dusty ledgers but who you would really like to have known.  However, it is writing with handcuffs.  You can’t tell a true story unless you are talking with truth and when an opportunity arises to add an imagined plot to the story because it, perhaps, spices things up or creates tension or some other such literary artifice, it must be pushed away.  Veracity is all.  The lives of the people have to be interesting and exciting enough to carry the story on its own merits.

A work of fiction, however, has none of these restrictions and writing historical fiction, you get the best of both worlds – freedom to explore and the ability to integrate your story with real events and real people of the time.  Who wouldn’t want to experience the fabulous gold rush in Ballarat or ride a horse in the first running of the world-famous Melbourne Cup or even meet Ned Kelly (hopefully not on a remote road at night)?

This story quickly follows Findo Gask from combat in the Indian mutiny, to London where a mystery is solved, setting the stage for more to come, to Edinburgh before taking us on a rugged 3-month journey across the oceans to the New World and Back Creek, north of Melbourne, bang in the middle of the fabulous gold rush.

This was the century that moulded Australia, at this time still a collection of colonies that earlier in the century had seen more than 160,000 convicts transported to serve their sentences as all but slaves – a story related in the Helots’ Tale series.  The enormous wealth generated on the goldfields of Australia saw tent cities rapidly evolve into proud, prosperous Victorian towns and cities (as in Queen Victoria, not just the colony of Victoria).

On the new world frontier, Findo falls for an attractive young governess who, like him, hails from Scotland and he begins to suspect that she has been tricked out of a substantial inheritance by an unscrupulous family lawyer.  One thing leads to another and he returns to Scotland with his new friend, Errol Rait, to investigate and try to set things straight.  The lawyer, however, has other ideas and both men are soon drawn into a dark web of deceit and a murderous plot.

Using contemporary sources and other research the plot is intertwined with actual events and people of the time and gallops along as twists and turns, puzzles and danger keep our heroes on the trail. One early reviewer told me the “setting of the mining camp was so well done with such detail, I had to finish the chapter because I thought I had mud all over me after finishing the last sentence of the chapter”. That’s when you know you’ve got the historical detail just right!

I have just started the next book in the series, The Case of the Wandering Corpse.  I’m looking forward to seeing where it takes me!


David CairnsAbout the Author

David Cairns, the Baron of Finavon (an ancient Scottish title), has always been a student of history.  Until recently, he was a technology entrepreneur with many successful (and – as he points out – one or two unsuccessful) ventures to his credit.

He has lived and worked on four continents and as a result has experienced the history of London and Boston, the buzz of Chicago, Nashville and Silicon Valley, the pioneering atmosphere of the South African bush, the lazy lifestyle of the Bahamas, the cultural diversities of Europe and the laid-back lifestyle of Australia, which is where he makes his home these days.

He is the author of The Helots’ Tale series – Downfall and Redemption.

Connect with David
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#BookReview Under a Veiled Moon by Karen Odden

Under A Veiled MoonAbout the Book

September 1878. One night, as the pleasure boat the Princess Alice makes her daily trip up the Thames, she collides with the Bywell Castle, a huge iron-hulled collier. The Princess Alice shears apart, throwing all 600 passengers into the river; only 130 survive. It is the worst maritime disaster London has ever seen, and early clues point to sabotage by the Irish Republican Brotherhood, who believe violence is the path to restoring Irish Home Rule.

For Scotland Yard Inspector Michael Corravan, born in Ireland and adopted by the Irish Doyle family, the case presents a challenge. Accused by the Home Office of willfully disregarding the obvious conclusion, and berated by his Irish friends for bowing to prejudice, Corravan doggedly pursues the truth, knowing that if the Princess Alice disaster is pinned on the IRB hopes for Home Rule could be dashed forever.

Corrovan’s dilemma is compounded by Colin, the youngest Doyle, who has joined James McCabe’s Irish gang. As violence in Whitechapel rises, Corravan strikes a deal with McCabe to get Colin out of harm’s way. But unbeknownst to Corravan, Colin bears longstanding resentments against his adopted brother and scorns his help.

As the newspapers link the IRB to further accidents, London threatens to devolve into terror and chaos. With the help of his young colleague, the loyal Mr. Stiles, and his friend Belinda Gale, Corravan uncovers the harrowing truth – one that will shake his faith in his countrymen, the law, and himself.

Format: ebook (336 pages)                Publisher: Crooked Lane Books
Publication date: 11th October 2022 Genre: Historical Fiction, Mystery

Find Under a Veiled Moon (Inspector Corravan #2) on Goodreads

Purchase links
Bookshop.org
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Hive | Amazon UK
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My Review

Under a Veiled Moon is the second in Karen Odden’s Inspector Michael Corravan historical mystery series, the follow-up to Down a Dark River, a book I very much enjoyed. In fact, I ended my review of that book by saying I hoped it was the first of many cases for Corravan so it was a pleasure to be reunited with him, as well as other characters from the first book such as his former partner, the resourceful and diligent Gordon Stiles, his just a little bit more than a friend, novelist Belinda Gale, and the Doyle family who took him in many years before. Belinda is one of my favourite characters. She’s an independent woman who has made her own way in the world and who now has connections with influential figures in London society. Perhaps her greatest gift though is her understanding of Corravan’s needs – and not just his physical ones either. As he remarks at one point, ‘It certainly wasn’t the first time she had presented me with an insight that steered an entire investigation into a channel I hadn’t explored’.  (Notice the river-related metaphors by the way?)

Once again, the reader gets a clear sense of Corravan the policeman – determined, resilient and with a strong sense of justice. As he says himself, ‘My persistance usually yielded results.’  But we also get an insight into the man he has been, which includes pickpocket, prize-fighter and dockhand. His past life has not been without tragedy and he has regrets about things he has done, or failed to do. All this makes him a satisfyingly well-rounded character. Corravan’s Irish heritage also forms an important part of the story given that the political situation relating to Ireland is a key element of the book’s plot.

The real life collision of the Princess Alice pleasure boat with the collier Bywell Castle, which resulted in many fatalities, forms one strand of a story into which the author weaves political intrigue, racial prejudice, gang warfare and acts of breathtaking wickedness carried out as a result of a perverted philosophy.

As before, the River Thames plays a key role in the book, its filthy, murky waters providing an apt metaphor for the seedy goings on in the sprawling city through which it flows. It plays an instrumental role as well, with knowledge of its tidal ebbs and flows proving crucial to events. One memorable and rather moving scene sees Corravan take to the river to perform a particularly tragic homecoming. The vivid descriptions of the thoroughfares and alleyways of London – in particular Whitechapel – and of the sights, sounds and smells (ugh) of the city all help to create a great sense of place.  You wouldn’t necessarily want to have lived there yourself but you can definitely imagine what it would have been like for those who did.

If you love historical mysteries with an intricate plot and authentic period atmosphere, then I have no hesitation in recommending Under a Veiled Moon. Actually, I do; read Down a Dark River first.  To my delight, the book’s last line suggests more cases – and challenges- lie ahead for Corravan, and possibly an answer to a question that has haunted him.

My thanks to the author for my digital review copy.

In three words: Atmospheric, intriguing, assured

Try something similar: Death Makes No Distinction by Lucienne Boyce


Karen OddenAbout the Author

Karen Odden earned her PhD in English from New York University and subsequently taught literature at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. She has contributed essays to numerous books and journals, written introductions for Victorian novels in the Barnes & Noble classics series, and edited for the journal Victorian Literature and Culture (Cambridge UP). Her previous novels, also set in 1870s London, have won awards for historical fiction and mystery. A member of Mystery Writers of America and Sisters in Crime and the recipient of a grant from the Arizona Commission on the Arts, Karen lives in Arizona with her family and her rescue beagle Rosy. (Photo: Author website)

Connect with Karen
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