Happy Thursday! Annabelle here, trying to stay cool in this Southern heat. Actually, it's hot all over our fair nation, but I've got the very thing to send cold chills down your spine even if you read it out by the swimming pool. It's called The Bedlam Detective, by author Stephen Gallagher, and it was just published earlier this year.
Set in 1912, the novel introduces Sebastian Becker, a former Pinkerton detective who now works for London's notorious Bethlehem Hospital, an insane asylum which was nicknamed "Bedlam" because its chaotic atmosphere. Sebastian works for the Lord Chancellor's Lunacy Commission, investigating wealthy individuals of dubious sanity to determine if they are competent to control their own fortunes or if the Lord Chancellor needs to appoint an overseer to do it for them. (Sounds like a great job, I know personally I could have a ball with it, but I digress.) Anyway, as the novel opens Sebastian is sent to check up on one Sir Owain Lancaster, a wealthy self-made industrialist who undertook an ill-fated expedition into the Amazon rainforest that left everyone in his numerous party dead or missing except himself and one other individual. Among the victims were Sir Owain's own wife and child. After his return Sir Owain ruined his own reputation by publishing a fantastic account of the expedition that blames the deaths of his family and fellow travelers on man-eating prehistoric monsters that he claims attacked the group. This outlandish story causes the public, and especially the scientific community, to ridicule and ostracize Sir Owain to the point that he has left London and retreated to his country estate on the moors, where Sebastian is sent to interview and observe him.
Almost as soon as he arrives in the English countryside to begin his investigation, two little girls from the neighboring village are found murdered and mutilated on Sir Owain's land in much the same fashion Sir Owain claims the members of his Amazon expedition were killed. Sir Owain becomes the obvious suspect, and it falls to Sebastian Becker to assist the inexperienced local police force in determining his guilt or innocence as well as his sanity. This book reminded me a great deal of the classic Sherlock Holmes tale, The Hound of the Baskervilles, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, with its setting on the English moors and the sightings of monsters as part of the local mythology. And one of my favorite parts of the book, Sir Owain's grisly descriptions of what befell the Amazon expedition, gives a nod to Jules Verne's novels such as Lost World and Mysterious Island. Author Stephen Gallagher deftly captures the spirit of the turn of the last century, when advances in science and exploration of lesser-known parts of our world first clashed openly with mythology and superstition.
Did Sir Owain murder the two girls, or is the famous "monster of Arnmouth", a nightmare creature of local legend, responsible for these deaths as well as those of other children gone missing over the years? If Sir Owain is the killer of the children, might he have also killed his own family and travelling companions in the Amazon and then concocted his fantastic story as a cover-up? You will have a difficult time putting The Bedlam Detective down until you find out.