From Publishers Weekly
Eccles writes police procedurals in the classic English tradition. In her latest Superintendent Gil Mayo tale (A Death of Distinction, 1998), she infuses a typical country-house setting with an atmosphere of menace. The recently widowed Dermot Voss and his two daughters have bought Edwina Lodge, a massive, rundown Victorian house in the town of Lavenstock near Birmingham. Part of the house is broken up into apartments, with the usual complement of eccentric lodgers. Next-door is another Victorian monstrosity, Simla, where three rather odd siblings, twins Hope and Francis Kendrick and their sister, Imogen, live. Also nearby is Ellington Close, a new development of homes. But it seems that each of the vividly described characters in this enclosed neighborhood may have something to hide. When a man is killed in the nearby allotment garden, nobody comes forward to identify him. The victim has been hit on the head and has drowned in just a few inches of water in a deserted garden plot in the middle of the night. Gil Mayo and Inspector Abigail Moon now have on their hands the most puzzling kind of murder case: both victim and killer are unknown, and then a second murder may or may not be linked to the first. Eccles delivers engaging characters and a nicely tangled plot in this worthy effort.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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From Kirkus Reviews
Another absorbing journey to Lavenstock, the town in England where low-keyed Detective Superintendent Gil Mayo and his team (A Death of Distinction, p. 303, etc.) are trying to identify the bludgeoned body of a man found in Ellington Close, a small, tight-knit community of old and newer houses. Dermot Voss, a recent widower in the film and video business, has just bought Edwina Lodge, a large place that combines living quarters with apartments for three tenants. Sarah, his late wife Lisas sister, has come to help Dermot and his two young daughters settle in. Morning newspapers are delivered to Edwina Lodge by teenager Patti Ryman, who also services nearby Simla, home of the Kendricksteacher Hope, her twin brother Francis, a writer, and their visiting sister Imogen Loxley. An abandoned car found in the village finally identifies the dead man as Philip Ensor, a sales rep supposedly away on business, who lived in Solihull with wife Judith but once lived in the same town as the Vosses. As Mayo tries to make sense of Ensors presence in the Close, little Patti Ryman is found dead, killed by a blow to the head. Is there a connection to the unsolved murders of two young girls in neighboring Hurstfield Division, or had Patti seen Ensors killer? It takes a while, but Mayo finally uncovers the crucial links that reveal the truth. The authors subtle development of a wide range of characters and the relationships among them produce the tensions and suspense that propel the storyone most readers will find fascinating to the finish. --
Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.