From Publishers Weekly
Pearce's second espionage-flavored whodunit may strike even his fans as overly derivative of its predecessor,
A Dead Man in Trieste (2004). The wry humor of the author's acclaimed Mamur Zapt historicals (
The Camel of Destruction, etc.), set in colonial Egypt, is less evident in this series, and the shifting locales make it more dependent on its hero, Sandor Seymour, an unobtrusive Special Branch detective. In 1911, Seymour travels to Istanbul to solve a murder of interest to the Foreign Office—Cunningham, the undersecretary of the British embassy, has been shot, after attempting to swim the Dardanelles straits. As the victim had a reputation as a ladies' man, Seymour's circle of suspects includes the man's lovers, as well as a variety of political players attempting to shape the future direction of the tottering Ottoman Empire. The unsurprising solution, coupled with Seymour's relatively undefined personality, leaves room for improvement in the next installment.
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About the Author
Michael Pearce was raised in Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, where his fascination for language began. He later trained as a Russian interpreter but moved away from languages to follow an academic career, first as a lecturer in English and the History of Ideas, and then as an administrator. He has a strong interest in human rights and in languages, both of which feature indirectly in his new series. Michael Pearce now lives in South-West London.
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