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With her rich cast of well-developed characters and
eloquent prose, British author Charles (Strange Children; Unruly
Passions; etc.) once again creates an absorbing mystery sure to appeal
to traditional Anglophiles. Sophie and Chris Lilburn leave their London
life for the cathedral town of Westmead, where Chris will teach history
in the cathedral school and be lay clerk in the cathedral choir. Living
in a rent-free house in Quire Close, two rows of stone medieval
terraced houses, in the shadow of the majestic cathedral should be
idyllic, but for Sophie it's anything but. Due to her inability to have
a child, her loving relationship with Chris begins to deteriorate.
Sophie has little in common with her neighbors, particularly the
lecherous Leslie Clunch, retired verger, and the arrogant Elspeth
Verey, widow of the prior dean and dictator of Westmead's social
standards. Sophie finds her only distraction is contemplating the
unsolved murder of an unidentified young woman who was killed in the
town 11 years earlier. When Jacquie Darke arrives in Westmead in search
of her long-missing sister, Alison, Sophie joins Jacquie in uncovering
what lies behind the town's prim and proper facade. Cold rain, gallons
of tea and eccentric characters generate a cozy Barbara Pym-like
atmosphere, while caf latte, mobile phones and the problems of
modernizing medieval houses root the story firmly in the present. This
is for genteel readers who appreciate a hint of sex. Agent, Carol
Heaton. (May 15)
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