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    Sweet Sorrow (eBook) By (author) David Roberts

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    Short Description for Sweet SorrowAugust 1939, war is now certain, this week, next week... soon. Lord Edward Corinth, newly married, is determined to spend these last days of peace quietly. The poet, Byron Gates is bizarrely murdered after the village fete - executed, in fact, his head chopped off on a wooden block - and Edward is asked to investigate.
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Full description for Sweet Sorrow

  • August 1939, the last hot days of a perfect English summer - war is now certain, this week, next week...soon. Lord Edward Corinth, newly married, is determined to spend these last days of peace quietly with Verity in their new house, The Old Vicarage, in the sleepy Sussex village of Rodmell - a honeymoon of sorts. Fight against it as he might, for Edward it turns out to be a busman's holiday. The poet, Byron Gates is bizarrely murdered after the village fete - executed, in fact, his head chopped off on a wooden block - and Edward is asked to investigate. Alas, murder is not yet done with Verity and Edward. For even in the hallowed studios of Broadcasting House, murder dares to rear its ugly head while Verity is being interviewed about her interesting life as a war correspondent. And before she can take up her new foreign posting, reporting on the international crisis for the "New Gazette", there are more deaths, and the intrepid couple embark on one of their most dangerous investigations to date. Praise for David Roberts: "Roberts just keeps getting better with each book." ("Publishers Weekly"); "Roberts pays meticulous attention to period detail and the result is a really well crafted and charming mystery story." ("Daily Mail"); "This is a witty and meticulous recreation of the class-ridden middle England of the 1930s...a perfect example of golden age mystery traditions with the cobwebs swept away." ("Guardian"); "Roberts has captured brilliantly the light and shade of pre-War Britain under the falling shadow of Nazism. A gripping, richly satisfying whodunit, with finely observed characters, sparkling with insouciance and stinging menace." (Peter James).