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Earnshaw’s mill is one of the last remnants of Bradfield’s glorious industrial past; however times are changing and Earnshaw’s future is hanging in the balance. Staff cuts need to be made if the mill is going to survive but the union is unhappy and its members are threatening strike action. With racial tensions already running high throughout the city, the prospect of mass redundancies at the heart of Bradfield’s Muslim community could cause even more trouble. The Earnshaw family’s problems spiral out of control when they discover that their son Simon has been murdered. As Michael Thackeray’s team investigate the death the mill is left teetering on the brink. And as the increasing popular far right political group the British Patriotic Party start campaigning for local elections violence spills on the streets of the city and it isn’t long before areas of Bradfield go up in flames.

280 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2003

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About the author

Patricia Hall

85 books13 followers
Patricia Hall is the pen-name of journalist Maureen O'Connor. She was born and brought up in West Yorkshire, which is where she has chosen to set her acclaimed series of novels featuring reporter Laura Ackroyd and DCI Michael Thackeray. She is married, with two grown-up sons, and now lives in Oxford.

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5 stars
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4 stars
12 (33%)
3 stars
13 (36%)
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2 (5%)
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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Judith.
1,182 reviews10 followers
April 13, 2015
I registered a book at BookCrossing.com!
http://www.BookCrossing.com/journal/13266555

Well, another British writer to investigate further!

The novel takes place in a small village in Yorkshire, England. DCI Michael Thackery is called in when one of the family owners of the Earnshaw Mill is found dead. Meanwhile, Thackery's SO, reporter Laura Ackroyd, is investigating the racial unrest in the area, unrest that also appears to center on the mill.

Coming from different directions, the two investigate an overlapping story. At times the discoveries seem coincidental, too coincidental, given that there is no deliberate coordination between the two. I enjoyed the writing, the sense of place, the characters, and look forward to reading more about them. I am especially fond of books about remote areas with low populations, like this area.
Profile Image for Kirsty Darbyshire.
1,091 reviews56 followers
December 7, 2010

My local library's crime section has tons of books by Patricia Hall and I keep passing them up. Last time I was in there I picked one up and it sounded ok, so I brought it home. This is from the middle of a long running series set in "Bradfield", a poorish city a short hop from Leeds - that's a very thinly disguised Bradford then. It's a male cop and girl reporter setup but so are some of my favourite crime series.

In the beginning I wasn't very into it, but it grew on me. There are some good in depth characters, some rather stereotyped ones, but no really cardboardy ones. The plot worked out ok - lots of race relations, worries about terrorism and failing textile mills - it rang pretty true to me.

A quick read, nothing very special but I'll probably pick another in the series up another time.

21 reviews
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April 6, 2008
I added this book to the "Whodunit? Murder, Misogyny, and Mayhem" syllabus because Hall does such a stellar job at depicting the racial prejudice/racism and sexism of every community depicted in the book. In addition, she shows how the clash of cultures intensifies when the economy worsens. Although some of my students are tempted to see only the repressive elements of the Pakistani-British community in the book, Hall's presentation of a town in conflict is much more nuanced than that. This book has launched good discussions on sexism in the workplace, covering, the (in)ability of a batterer to change, and honor killings. Personally, I am chagrined that each new book in this compelling series is not issued simultaneously in the U.K. and the U.S.
Profile Image for Mary.
750 reviews
February 19, 2008
This is a mystery which I picked because it supposedly had stuff about striking workers. It did have that, but it was a minor plot line. The thing I liked about this book was the accents of the people, from what I assume is northern England. (I don't know my geography!) There was also stuff in the plot about Pakistani culture in the midst of British culture and how values may clash.
Profile Image for Gary Van Cott.
1,446 reviews8 followers
October 31, 2014
The book continues in the rather depressing vein of the last few books. If you are going to write about murder all the time your books need to have a few positives in the continuing characters lives. I can't see what the title has to do with the story, either.
254 reviews
June 18, 2012
English mystery. Inspector Thackery and journalist Ackroyd solve the murder of a millowner's son.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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