Quotes
"[C]olorful and richly historical.” Cleveland Plain Dealer
“While there is an intriguing mystery at the heart of Enter Pale Death—one that is set up within the first few pages—one stays for the social intrigue and the historical setting, which Cleverly has nailed to the last nuance…Cleverly moves things along at a leisurely pace, but it’s all to give readers time to note the surroundings, which, like the mystery upon which the book is built, are first rate. Even if you don’t reflexively reach for historical mysteries, you should give Enter Pale Death a shot.” BookReporter.com
“Cleverly’s excellent twelfth whodunit featuring Scotland Yard Assistant Commissioner Joe Sandilands offers her sleuth a number of genuinely baffling crimes to solve…Cleverly manages to pull everything together logically, with more than a
few surprises.” Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Joe Sandilands,
Scotland Yard detective and self-described troublemaker, knows he’s
entering quicksand when he explores an anonymous letter’s allegations
that Lady Lavinia Truelove’s supposed accidental death was foul play
connected to a decades-old murder on her Suffolk estate…Sandilands’ many fans, and readers who love Downton Abbey, Rennie Airth, and Charles Todd, will revel in this elegant, intricately woven mystery set in the early twentieth century.” Booklist
“Cleverly delivers a witty, atmospheric, and well-conceived
slice of British crime…Her marvelous descriptions of country lore and an
evocative Suffolk countryside setting provide a taste of all things British and
may send curious readers scurrying to the library to learn more about the
ancient traditions in this most ancient of lands.” BookPage
“Narrator Matthew Brenher sounds wonderfully at home in 1930s London and in the country house of Sir James Truelove…Brenher effortlessly negotiates the subtle class nuances among the servants and local police and the less subtle differences among their masters. Cleverly’s plotting keeps the listener guessing to the end.” AudioFile