Vanishing Act

(A Tom Knight Mystery, book 1)

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Pub Date 17 Sep 2020 | Archive Date 6 Oct 2020

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Description

A darkly funny whodunnit of sex, death and the tragi-comedy of old age

Ex-SAS officer Tom Knight is now a 73-year-old private detective in a seaside town, with a bad leg, a taste for good weed and a morbid fear of growing old. He’s also fallen in love with Fran, a sprightly 52-year-old carer at a retirement home. The bad news is that she’s dumped him for lying about his age.

So when she’s framed for the murder of three old ladies at the home he resolves to win her back by proving her innocence. His quest takes him behind the town’s veil of respectability, into a murky world of Oxbridge hookers, a lovelorn Tarot card reader and England’s most obnoxious policeman. He even faces up to his fear of old age and dementia, by going undercover at the care home where the murders happened.

But will it be enough to win back the lady of his dreams?

Proving that you’re just as young as you feel, the Tom Knight mysteries combine delicious comedy with a precision-engineered plot.


A darkly funny whodunnit of sex, death and the tragi-comedy of old age

Ex-SAS officer Tom Knight is now a 73-year-old private detective in a seaside town, with a bad leg, a taste for good weed and a...


A Note From the Publisher

A distinctive new character in crime fiction, sure to delight fans of Jonas Jonasson and Fredrik Backman!

A distinctive new character in crime fiction, sure to delight fans of Jonas Jonasson and Fredrik Backman!


Available Editions

EDITION Ebook
ISBN 9781788422628
PRICE £3.99 (GBP)

Average rating from 34 members


Featured Reviews

I enjoyed Vanishing Act. It’s not perfect but it’s an engaging story with some genuine humour, too.

Tom Knight is now 73 and living in Eastbourne. Ex-military and still working as a private detective, he is an engaging protagonist with a wealth of experience and some handy gadgets – and some of the physical problems you’d expect at 73, including a very dodgy knee. It’s rather a winning combination, and Tom’s attempts to woo Fran by proving her innocent of murder form a decent plot, too.

Charlie Hodges writes very well. There is some genuine wit in places and his prose is readable and unaffected. The vain, lazy, bigoted and dim policeman whom Tom is up against is something of an over-the-top caricature, but I didn’t really mind that. Some of the farcical elements of the story got a little wearisome and some tightening up would help as Tom does get into and then narrowly escapes from rather a lot of perilous situations, but it’s a good read overall with a rather poignant ending. I’ll certainly be reading the next in the series and I expect Hodges to develop Tom into an enduring character. Recommended.

(My thanks to Farrago for an ARC via NetGalley.)

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Tom Knight is not the man he was. Which was young, fit and in the SAS. Now he's 73, a private detective with a bad leg. Wishful thinking gets him into trouble when 52 year old Fran dumps him for lying about his age.

And then she's arrested for the murder of 3 old ladies at the care home where she works. Convinced of her innocence, he sets about to prove it with the help of his mate Merv, which even involves going undercover as a client at the care home.

An enjoyable tale which got a little confusing as the rather muddled action reached its conclusion, but I definitely want to see what Tom gets up to next

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An enjoyable murder mystery with lots going on, sometimes too much though as I did get a bit confused over who was who at times.

Although touching, it did confuse me that the main character would go to so much trouble and expense unpaid, but that did make me more compassionate towards him at the end!

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I received this ARC via Netgalley and Farrago, in return for an honest review. This is a stand-alone book that may be the first in a new series. Tom Knight is 73 and living in Eastbourne, UK. He’s lonely, ex-military and works, on occasion, as a PI. With a busted-up knee and a few other age-related issues, he knows there are a few challenges to finding an interesting woman to date. Meeting Fran, a nurse at a local dementia care facility, is wonderful. Until, that is, she learns that he lived about his age (by a good 14 years) and that ends that. When Fran is charged with murdering several people in the care home, Tom decides to be her knight in shining armor and find the murder. There are lots of dangerous situations as he unravels the Gordian knot.
I really liked the concept of an older gentleman as the story’s protagonist. It’s written from alternating 3rd person focuses (Tom, then Fran, etc) that place the reader at each location and experience. Somehow, Tom didn’t really click with me, so it was a stretch to work my way through the book. The ending is touching; the writing is clear.

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This is a pretty fun mystery. The main character is likable, and the story is mostly entertaining. Humor is hard to pull off but the humor worked here. The book doesn't have the polish of more experienced authors, but I hope the author continues to write.

I really appreciate the ARC for review!!

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Do you like novels with nonstop action, lots of graphic violence, and interludes of sex, drugs, and rock'n'roll? That's what's happening in this book, except that Tom Knight, Private Eye, is 73 years old.

The novel takes full advantage of the humorous potential in this situation.

Tom has a crush on a nursing home caregiver who has been framed for the murders of several old ladies. In an attempt to impress her, he takes on the investigation. His visits to her in prison, more alarmingly covered with wounds and bruises every time, make her feel beholden and worried -- but will they lead to love?

Knight is not exactly a likable guy, and neither are any of his friends, or really anybody else in the book. But it is masterfully written, and a very enjoyable read.

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A book about an older man who is still working as a PI. He finds someone to love but she is accousted of Marder. To help her he and a friend solve the case.

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It perhaps shows my bias that I was surprised that the main character was in his seventies. This book was funny and clever and, while it was a mystery, that was almost secondary to it being a humorous book with great dialogue. I recommend this book as a quickly holiday read.

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Vanishing Act by Charlie Hodges introduces us to Tom Knight, a widowed private investigator who’s 73 years old but trying to pass off as a 59-year old in order to seduce Fran, a worker at a local care home. He almost succeeds but she sees his passport and discovers his true age. Fran is accused of murder and Tom sets off to prove her innocence in the hope that she will then look more kindly upon him. Or maybe it’s because he believes in justice.

Tom is a very fallible hero. He smokes weed. His knees are knackered and a stick, crutches, walking frame and wheelchair all make appearances. However, Tom’s more than capable of holding his own against villains who aren’t as fit or as clever as they should be. The book plays to our desire to see the good guy win, especially if we see him as the underdog.

There are some moments in the book that made me laugh out loud and I still snigger at the thought of them a couple of days later, e.g. the orgy and the dogging episode – especially the brief view of the orgy. I really enjoyed the book with the plot constantly moving forward. The only aspect that I didn’t understand was why the murderer hunted down their last victim. To be fair, not everything is explained – the reader is left to work it out, e.g. why three women were killed in the same evening, so maybe I missed the logic.

I shall definitely look out for the author’s next book, Live Bait, which is previewed at the end of this book.

#VanishingAct #NetGalley

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A gentle enough crime with some fairly well drawn characters. Our hero, Tom Knight, is reasonably likeable, in spite of fibbing on a dating site! He solves the crime, but in an interesting twist, doesn't get the girl.

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This is a cosy mystery rich with black comedy. We have an unusual – for this genre – protagonist in the elderly Tom, but he’s as energetic as any younger one! You do worry a bit about his hips and knees when he gets into kerfuffles, but he’s made of stern stuff! I hope I’ll be that robust at his age…
Mature Tom has the added benefit of experience and wisdom, both of which he uses when dealing with the intriguing case, but unfortunately not so much when dealing with the attractive Fran.
The plot is clever and the action brisk. It’s an absorbing, bittersweet read, and highly enjoyable. The author has a lively, light style that’s gripping and entertaining.

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73 year old Tom Knight has met the love of his life, Fran, but lost her when she finds out he has lied about his age. When he tries to meet her to apologise, he discovers that she has been arrested for multiple murders at the nursing home where she works. He sets out to prove her innocence and try and find the real murderer.
A light and quirky story full of humour. Tom is likeable and amusing, as are many of the other characters, although not all of them are clearly defined and I did get a bit confused over who was who. The story had a good pace and was very enjoyable to read. The plot was well planned with plenty of twists. Overall I thought it a great read and I look forward to the next book in the series.

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One of the benefits of joining NetGalley (and getting approved) is how many new writers I’ve managed to find, even though the desire to join it was largely driven by getting hold of books by writers I already enjoy.

Charlie Hodges’ Vanishing Act is one of the former kind – I’ve never heard of Hodges, though he has had a successful career as a writer for television in the UK, among other things. The premise of the novel, which is what I’m trying to build up to but failing miserably at, is quite cool.

Private eyes are usually of two types – either weary middle-aged with a hell of a lot of experience and cynicism, or young, upbeat, upright. Tom Knight, the protagonist of Vanishing Act, is closer to the grave than most literary gumshoes. The seventy-three-year-old former British Army officer has a bad knee but the spirit of a man at least a decade younger, which is what prompts him to lie about his age in order to score a date with Fran. Things go awry just as they’re going well, and Knight finds himself in the dog house. Not for long, however, for a triple murder in the home for the elderly where Fran works sees her implicated in the horrific crime, and Knight takes it upon himself to get to the bottom of the mystery.

Hodges’ writing style seems a perfect fit for the kind of man Knight is and for the world he inhabits. The book is, in almost equal parts, delightful and dark, taking the reader from a poetic view of the sea to drug dens to sprawling estates. The protagonist is wonderfully layered and has the kind of nuances and little touches that seldom make their presence felt in the first novel of a series, but which Hodges manages to craft without drawing attention to them.

The supporting characters are solid too – especially the asshole cop Bullock (unlike most mysteries, he isn’t just a bumbler, but an evil one at that), but the peripheral ones, vital to a murder mystery, are a let-down, especially the ones on whom Knight’s suspicion falls when his lady love is transported to prison. The denouement thus feels a little off: the characters need to be fleshed out a little more for the shock value to come off.

The mystery itself piques one’s interest and trying to undo the threads is both fun and tedious, often at the same time. It’s quite an adventure, the way Hodges designs the events in the novel, and his very subtle hints at racism and the class structure are particularly inspired.

The novel is also strangely sweet in exploring Knight’s interactions with Fran and other women he gives a twice-over. Maybe we aren’t used to a lot of literature where the elderly discuss sex or get stoned, but by the looks of it, we could do with a bit. Props to Hodges for the way he ends the novel too. Either way would have been fun, but his chosen conclusion marks it out for the better.

Vanishing Act is one of those books which deserves a chance not just because it’s unique in a couple of ways but also because it works on delivering that uniqueness. It hobbles along in much the way its protagonist does at times but is ultimately a fairly satisfying read.

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Really enjoyed this mystery with a 73=year old lead character Tom knight.a former private detective,He lies about his age on a dating appp the woman he meets is angry he lied. about his age.When she is accused of three murder he gets busy investigating to win her back,entertaining,#netgalley#farragoboojs

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The Misadventures Of Tom.....
Enjoyable comedy mystery introducing Tom Knight, ex SAS and private detective. When Tom investigates the plight of his former lady love, Fran, mayhem ensues. Genuinely funny and entertaining with an engaging protagonist in Tom and a colourful cast of supporting characters. As you follow Tom and his misadventures you may find yourself rooting for him all the way. A promising start to a new series.

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The story is of an old soldier, ex intelligence corps, trying to woo a much younger women, but she flees on discovering his real age, calling him a dirty old man. The young woman is a care worker in an old people’s home. He then learns that she has been arrested for murder after incriminating evidence was found on her person when three old ladies were found dead during her night shift. Believing it to be a convenient open and shut case to suit the investigating Detective, he decides to investigate the crime to see if he could find the truth. Using devices when able he follows various leads that turns up as red herrings while getting up the nose of the police. Disguised he innocently interviews suspects and gets away with it; with other leads he has to get up close without being seen by surmounting physical barriers that often ends in disaster and injury. An interesting story following a has been old soldier and his ex-army mate who contrary to all probability manages to crack the case and spring his lady love free from jail. While she is most grateful there is no getting away from the fact that he is still a geriatric passed it old codger who is left to lick his wounds. Quite a lesson, we are not as young as we feel, but only as our body will let us.

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I received a free ARC copy of this British mystery novel at the invitation of Farrago, Publisher, author Charlie Hodges, and Netgalley. Thank you all for sharing your hard work with me. I have read this novel of my own volition, and this review reflects my honest opinion of this work. The protagonists in this story are intriguing, the pace quick, and lots of subtle snips good for a laugh or two. I am hoping this will be a series. We old folk need our heroes, too.

Tom Knight is in his third profession after years with the military in the Intelligence Corps and SAS. Upon his military retirement, he took courses and qualified as a teacher but after a couple of years in that profession, he is bored. Tired, and bored. Lonely, tired, and bored. He has decided on becoming a self-employed PI and feels qualified with his military background. His bum knee might slow him down a bit but he can still function with self-medicating injections of morphine and his very attractive cane. Too, his occasional need to smoke a good joint might not set too well. He hopes for at the least interesting action, with the occasional need to hire his best friend Merv to back him up. It has been a while since he and Merv saw action together.

Ted is two years widowed. He meets Fran on a dating site and is drawn to set up a meet. And though not optimistic, he claims only 59 of his 73 years and acquires a prescription for Viagra. Just in case... After a scrumptious home-cooked meal and intellectual chatter, she is wooed - until she stumbles across his passport on the bedside table. In seconds Ted moves from attractive, personable date material to Dirty Old Man.

And then Fran is accused of killing three of the little old ladies she nurses at a rest home in the city. Perhaps if Tom and his friend Merv can clear her of this crime that Ted is sure she could not have done, he might have another shot at a date?

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An enjoyable and highly entertaining mystery, gripping and well written.
i liked the characters, the humour and the style of writing.
It's the first book I read by this author and won't surely be the last.
Recommended.
Many thanks to the publisher and Netgalley for this ARC, all opinions are mine.

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Vanishing Act is the debut novel in a new PI murder mystery series by Charlie Hodges. Released 17th Sept 2020 by Farrago, it's 286 pages and available in paperback and ebook formats. It's worth noting that the ebook format has a handy interactive table of contents as well as interactive links and references throughout. I've really become enamored of ebooks with interactive formats lately.
I tend toward a reading list that's heavily weighted toward the stately home golden age refined British mysteries, so finding this gem of a modern day fairly gritty PI mystery with a geriatric ex-SAS officer protagonist was a surprise to put it mildly. I was admittedly hooked from the first chapter and the pace didn't let up and it kept me reading straight through. The dramatis personae are varied and interesting and well fleshed-out. Aside from Tom Knight (ex-SAS former badass 73 year old trapped inside a treacherous body suffering the ravages of time and the abuse to which it's been subjected over the years), and his sidekick Merv, the author has provided a plethora of suspects from which to choose (including one very corrupt policeman who was both annoying -and- incompetent).

The disparate plot threads wind tighter and eventually resolve into a wistful resolution. The book is eminently readable and enjoyable. There are flashes of true wit and self deprecating humor. The author has manfully avoided the cheap age-ist humor which most would've included. Tom is a sympathetic and well drawn character and despite his foibles (charging headlong into danger with a very dodgy knee), he's likeable intelligent and well drawn.

Four stars. I'll be looking for future installments with anticipation.

Disclosure: I received an ARC at no cost from the author/publisher for review purposes.

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Vanishing Act by Charlie Hodges is the first in a series of books featuring Tom Knight.

Book blurb:'Proving that you're just as young as you feel, the Tom Knight mysteries combine delicious comedy with a precision engineered plot.'

This one really delivers the goods. Tom Knight, a former intelligence officer with a bad knee, is having a bit of trouble remembering that he's no longer a young man, or even a middle-aged one for that matter... he's seventy-three. After the death of his beloved wife two years ago Tom went into a sort of hibernation from which he's only recently awakened thanks to Fran, a new acquaintance who has reinvigorated certain feelings that the old fellow had long since forgotten. But, alas, Fran, who's in her early 50s, ended their budding romance when she found out that Tom had been deceiving her about his real age (He's not fifty-nine).

When Fran is arrested and charged with the murders of several elderly women at the retirement home where she works Tom sees an opportunity to win her back by proving her innocence. With the assistance of Merv, a very resourceful fellow who dabbles in various money-making schemes on the fringe of legality, Tom gets to work on the case. If his knee holds out and he can keep clear of his nemesis Detective Constable Bullock he might just win back Fran.

Vanishing Act is the Goldilocks of mystery stories--Not too hard, not too soft, just right. Witty with some nice twists and fun, fully developed characters. There's a decent amount of action along with the more traditional sleuthing type of mystery plus a wacky character or two and one particular plot point that is not only unbelievably brilliant but funny as well. Somewhat reminiscent of the late Donald E. Westlake.

Anyone over a certain age will surely sympathize with having to adjust to the fact that one's mind doesn't understand the limitations of one's physical abilities. It's rare to find a book (or series) with an older protagonist who isn't either saccharine sweet or an overbearing curmudgeon. I will definitely be looking for more books in this series.

Suitable for most readers (Rated PG). A few cases of mildly strong language, adult situations, and references to drug use.

***I received a free digital copy of this title from NetGalley.

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I quite enjoyed this story of mystery. The plot was intriguing, there was some suspense and a bit of dark humour. What's not to like? I look forward to future installments of the Tom knight mystery stories.

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This is a cracking debut about a less than convincing private investigator. He has all the attributes and qualities to do well in this netherworld of criminal classes and bestriding the thin line between lawful and illegal activity.
The trouble is Tom Knight is 73 years old and impulsive, often placing his body where his brain regrets being.

Not a difficult read, but the crimes are serious and the threat is ever present in his endeavours. A nice book to progress and engage with but, a wonder if Tom’s body will make it to the end.

The author creates tension and a degree of mystery but also includes humour in the antics of a man trying to defy his age. Ready to fight crime, uphold justice rather than tend his allotment.

I thoroughly enjoyed the concept and the challenges this protagonist uniquely faces. I thought the multi-layered plot line was always interesting and never required me to suspend belief. It was also fun to see characters in later life delighting in their own pleasure and amusement.

Detective fiction can be familiar after a while. Location, character and humanity set the best apart.

This new series has real promise of being sublimely different, amusing and full of life. Important when getting old fills many with dread and uncertainty.

The plot perhaps steers one away from rushing to see out one’s days in a Care Home but even here the life engendered with the characters interaction, reflects human warmth rather than stereotype smells and senility.

The book ends with the next instalment so the promise is there for more of the same. Based on this first outing I am looking forward to following Tom’s journey - easy to keep up with as he walks with a stick!

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