The Last Pleasure Garden

The Last Pleasure Garden

by Lee Jackson (Author)

Synopsis

A sinister figure stalks the gas-lit groves of Cremorne Gardens, the last pleasure - ground on the banks of the Thames. His weapon, a sharp pair of scissors. His victims, young women in the first bloom of youth. His crime - merely to remove a lock of their hair. Inspector Decimus Webb of Scotland Yard suspects a harmless lunatic is at large. But, when morbid obsession turns to murder, even Webb's loyal sergeant begins to doubt his judgement. As the press and his superiors clamour for answers, Webb's investigations lead him to Rose Perfitt, aspiring debutante and daughter of a respectable stock-broker. Will she fall prey to 'The Cutter' or does a worse fate beckon? One thing is certain - only Decimus Webb can save her. Lee Jackson's third Inspector Webb novel takes the reader into the forgotten world of the Victorian pleasure-garden, in a gripping mystery of garish gas-light and dark secrets.

$3.22

Save:$12.94 (80%)

Quantity

1 in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 320
Publisher: William Heinemann Ltd
Published: 06 Apr 2006

ISBN 10: 0434012491
ISBN 13: 9780434012497
Book Overview: 'Victorian London is vividly brought to life...For an atmospheric picture of the period, it's hard to beat' Sunday Telegraph

Media Reviews
Victorian London is vividly brought to life . . . For an atmospheric picture of the period, it's hard to beat. - Sunday Telegraph Praise for Lee Jackson: Lee Jackson's Dickensian style of narrative gives an authentic Victorian voice to Metropolitan Murder. Once again, Mr. Jackson has succeeded in creating the atmosphere of nineteenth-century London, with its respectable veneer hiding a vicious underworld. - Sunday Telegraph London Dust . . . is a powerful and evocative novel that brings the past, and its dead, to life again. - Guardian From the Trade Paperback edition.
Author Bio
LEE JACKSON lives in London with his partner Joanne. His first book, London Dust, was shortlisted for the Ellis Peters Historical Dagger Award. He is fascinated by the social history of Victorian London and spends much of his time on the ongoing development of his website www.victorianlondon.org