Circle, The

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Pub Date 1 Jun 2016 | Archive Date 4 Apr 2016

Description

Intrepid 19th-century private investigators American Matthew Grand and Englishman James Batchelor return in their second mystery.

July, 1868. On receiving a commission from Matthew’s cousin Luther to look into the suspicious death of Lafayette Baker, Head of the US National Detective Police, private investigators Matthew Grand and his business partner James Batchelor leave London for Washington DC. They find a country still scarred by the bitter legacy of the Civil War and even in death Lafayette Baker remains one of the most hated men north or south of the Potomac.

The newly-created Ku Klux Klan wanted him dead. So did the Washington brothel-keepers, bar-owners and gamblers whom Baker had closed down. What does beautiful former spy Miss Belle Boyd know that she’s not telling them? And could the President himself be involved?

Matthew Grand finds he has come home to a mixed reception, while Batchelor struggles as an Englishman abroad. Will either of them survive long enough to uncover the truth?
Intrepid 19th-century private investigators American Matthew Grand and Englishman James Batchelor return in their second mystery.

July, 1868. On receiving a commission from Matthew’s cousin Luther to...

Available Editions

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ISBN 9781780290836
PRICE US$28.95 (USD)

Average rating from 5 members


Featured Reviews

First Sentence: At first, he didn’t want to go near the window

Matthew Grand, former U.S. Army officer, and his business partner James Batchelor, former reporter for the London Tribune, are now enquiry agents in London. When Matthew’s cousin Luther, commissions them to investigate the suspicious death of Lafayette Baker, Head of the US National Detective Police, they are taken to Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, and Knoxville in search of Baker’s killer. They discover many suspects, including those very high-up in the new, post-Lincoln government, and a former amoretti of Matthews who believes she is being poisoned.

We begin with a betrayal and a hanging. That get’s one’s attention, but it’s then following by an abrupt transition, which is a bit disconcerting. However, don’t give up. One thing Trow does extremely well is to set the scene—“The door swung open and a waft of incense, sickly and powerful, hit them like a wall. A single lamp burned on a circular table and someone sat behind it, playing solitaire. His hands were smooth and supple, snaking over the Devil’s picture books with accustomed ease. His face was n darkness.” There were, however, terms one might night know, especially for items of clothing, such as a “wide awake” and an “Ulster,” but that’s part of the allure for reading historicals.

Trow has a wonderful way of treating historical figures, such as Edwin Stanton and Sojourner Truth, and incorporates them seamlessly into the story while combining them with the fictional characters, such as Grand’s former fiancée and her husband. That also creates a nice subplot, as Arlette believes her husband is trying to poison her. One does love Grand’s description—“He remembered Autie Custer from West Point, and a one over-promoted idiot never walked God’s earth.” It is also interesting to see Washington, D.C. during this period. There is a lot of history here that won’t be found in history books about the politics of this country after the war, the beginning of the Klu Klux Klan and the Knights of the Golden Circle.

Grand, the Yankee, and Batchelor are a very good, interesting team. Their strengths complement one another. Their different personalities provide some lightness to the story.

“The Circle” is very well plotted with a plot that keeps one engrossed and filled with numerous suspects, some quite famous. There is an excellent building of suspense and plenty of plot twists. One really does want to know what’s next for this very interesting pair.

THE CIRCLE (Hist Myst-Grant and Batchelor-England/Washington D.C.-1868) – G+
Trow, M.J. – 2nd in series
Severn House, 2016

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