1900. Archaeologist Abigail Wilson returns to the Eternal City as a guest speaker for a festival on Classical Rome, although she also hopes the trip will be a well-earned holiday for herself and her husband, private investigator Daniel Wilson. However, the bloody history of the ancient arena seeps into the present with the violent murder of one of Abigail's colleagues and his wife at the Colosseum itself.
Moving from the Forum to the Spanish Steps, Rome is suddenly the backdrop of another investigation for the Museum Detectives who clash with local authorities and a rising mafia influence in a race to uncover the truth.
Jim Eldridge is the author of many books for children, including titles in the My Story series, the Warpath books, and How to Handle Grown-Ups. He has had 250 TV scripts broadcast in the UK and internationally for children's and teen television, and is also the creator and writer of Radio 4's long-running comedy-drama series, King Street Junior.
While this book is competently written it seems the author wanted to share all he'd learned about the political and social context of the Bava Beccaris massacre aka Milan riots 1898 that arose over massive increases in the cost of food, especally bread. That and the rise of the Cosa Nostra.
The "mystery" that Abigail and Daniel solve of the killing of a couple is both simple and farfetched. Who committed the crime was instantly obvious. Why, and the character development, not convincing. There were other aspects of the book that would be jarring for regular followers of the series,