Series: Book 1 in the Felse series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: Detective, Lang:en
Summary
Best known in America for her brilliantly imagined
twelfth-century Benedictine monk/detective, Brother Cadfael,
Ellis Peters has also enthralled fans on both sides of the
Atlantic with her superbly constructed stories featuring
British police detective George Felse. Inspector Felse first appeared in what has since been
called a classic of the genre, Fallen Into the Pit. This
multilayered, most ingenious whodunit is long-awaited and, as
mystery fans will soon discover, well worth waiting for. "Understand me once and for all, fighting is something not
to be considered short of a life-and-death matter... It
proves nothing. It solves nothing," Chad Wedderburn tells
thirteen-year-old Dominic Felse. A classics master who fought
with the Resistance, Wedderburn came home to Comerford to
teach school. Ironically, when the peace of the little
village is shattered by the murder of a former German
prisoner of war, it is the peaceful Wedderburn who becomes
the primary suspect. Police Sergeant George Felse is deeply
disturbed that his son Dominic is the one who discovers the
body, and that the boy has begun doggedly pursuing clues in
Comerford's isolated countryside. Murder is a deadly
business, and the closer young Felse comes to the truth, the
more likely he is to become a victim himself. His father
knows this all too well, and for the first time in his career
his personal life is threatened by his policeman's duties.
Now, as George Felse uncovers the skeletons in the closets of
Comerford's best citizens, he begins to understand the forces
that may drive men or women to desperate acts. But will he
deduce enough to forestall another tragedy - or stop a killer
with a twisted mind and bloody plans? Rich with the hues of the Shropshire countryside and its
vividly drawn character portraits, this irresistibly
suspenseful mystery is still further reason to place Ellis
Peters alongside Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers, and P. D.
James.