by Andrew Taylor (Author)
After the coldest night of the year, they find the man's body. He is dangling from the Hanging Tree on the outskirts of a village near Lydmouth, with his trousers round his ankles. Is it suicide, murder, or accidental death resulting from some bizarre sexual practice? Journalist Jill Francis and Detective Inspector Thornhill become involved in the case in separate ways. Jill is also drawn unwillingly into the affairs of the small public school where the dead man taught. Meanwhile a Peeping Tom is preying upon Lydmouth; Jill has just moved into her own house and is afraid she is being watched. And there are more distractions, on a personal level, for policeman and reporter ...
Format: paperback
Publisher: Hodder Paperbacks
Published:
ISBN 10: 0340617152
ISBN 13: 9780340617151
Book Overview: From the prize-winning author of Richard and Judy Book Club novel, The American Boy, this is the third in the acclaimed Lydmouth crime series, set on the Welsh/English border in the confusing years after the Second World War.
'Part baffling mystery, part social commentary, The Lover of the Grave is so atmospheric you can practically feel the ice on the inside of the windows'
Liverpool Daily Post
'The tensions, both emotional and sexual, that run through this deftly plotted novel stretch the reader's nerves almost to breaking point'
Val McDermid, Manchester Evening News
'This absorbing tale is only the third of Taylor's Lydmouth Mysteries, yet already they rank among the finest of English rural whodunit/whydunits..'
Shropshire Star
'A nicely satisfying read'
The Irish Times
'Andrew Taylor was given the thumbs up long ago for beautifully crafted, well written narratives combining sublety, depth and that vital 'Oh my God what is the hell is going to happen next' factor, which is the driving force of the story-teller... The Lover of the Grave... makes you long to read the next tale'
Frances Fyfield Express on Saturday
'A good, meaty story in the best classic tradition'
Birmingham Post
'This absorbing tale is only the third of Taylor's Lydmouth mysteries, yet already they rank among the finest of English rural whodunit/whydunits'
Cumberland Evening News and Star
'Taylor evokes and stays faithful to the narrow convention and dingy austerity of the 1950s, He is an excellent writer who has conjured up an understated and grimy drama. Very praiseworthy'
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'Quite definitely a cut above the usual whodunnit'
Yorkshire Post-