From Publishers Weekly
Lady Imogen Swain, once a Cecil Beaton beauty, now annoys Harrod's employees by trying to return 30-year-old ball gowns in this highly civilized, unexpectedly tepid tale of political doings in Britain. During a particularly nasty general election campaign, Lady Imogen decides to tell the world what she knows about the infamous "Faber Mystery," a political scandal as old as her wardrobe. She invites Jemina Shore, TV's consummately professional investigative journalist, to her dilapidated townhouse to reveal what happened to Franklyn Faber, who vanished without a trace in the middle of his 1964 trial for selling state secrets. Could his fate, which has baffled the nation for decades, be described in one of the diaries Lady Imogen presses into her hands? Initially inclined to think not, Shore changes her mind later that evening when, after reading a few passages, it becomes clear that Lady Imogen, as former mistress to one of the players in the scandal who is currently up for reelection, does indeed know whereof she speaks. Unfortunately, the answer rests in one of the other diaries, which goes missing after Lady Imogen falls to her death that same night from her rickety balcony. Her disaffected daughters and her former lover's children are among the suspects in an intelligent tale that is filled with atmosphere but whose characters seem a bit remote.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
This text refers to an alternate
Hardcover
edition.
From Library Journal
Franklyn Faber, on trial for selling government secrets, disappeared 30 years before, a presumed suicide. When his skeleton appears in the basement of recently deceased Lady Imogen Swain, it means more scandal for Burgo Smyth, a beleaguered foreign secretary who is caught up in a tight, nasty reelection campaign. Shortly before her death, Lady Imogen gave investigative reporter Jemima Shore one of her diaries, which details her passionate affair with Smyth. Soon, the remaining diaries go missing and blackmail and murder rear their ugly heads. Shore, Fraser's smart and glamorous series heroine from such titles as A Splash of Red (Chivers Audio Bks., 1995), wears well. This fine mystery is appealingly read by Patricia Hodge. An excellent choice.?John Hiett, Iowa City P.L.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--Ce texte provient de la
Audio Cassette
édition.