A mystery series set in England, "crime fiction" genre to be specific...in the late 1930's...an investigation overseen by an intelligent Scotland Yard Inspector with a strong moral compass and a heart...resilient female characters, also intelligent...and mystery writer, Josephine Tey, in the middle of the investigation: this is a mystery series that can keep me entertained for months.
The aftermath of a gruesome murder, a man buried alive in a remote graveyard in North London, opens this novel, followed by several other murders, carefully staged, leaving clues that baffle the early investigation but before long, pointing to a heinous event that somehow ties the victims together. Before WWI, Montague Rhodes James was Provost of King's College in Cambridge and a well loved, much respected mentor of the many young men he oversaw. Later he was known as M.R. James, author of famous ghost stories; he told his first stories on Christmas Eve prior to the famous "Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols." Archie Penrose heard them when a student at King's. As Scotland Yard Detective Chief Inspector Archie Penrose, he soon discovers the gruesome murders are following the plots of some of these ghost stories, and the challenge is identifying the patterns that will save lives and capture the murderer.
A parallel plot involves a serial rapist casting Cambridge in fear, and Upton captures all the nuances: how personal the crime felt even when you didn't know the victim; the media's stirring up emotions; the suspicion cast at every male; anger at the police for not solving the crimes more quickly; the lack of understanding of the lasting effects of sexual assault on its victims, and the loss of freedom for women.
An additional plot line, and one I assume has run through the previous six novels, is the friendship between Archie and Josephine Tey, the relationship between Marta and Josephine, and that of Archie and his lover, Bridget Foley. Their relationships are interconnected, some for many years, and on the 20th celebration of the Armistice, as complicated as the situation developing in Europe.
Since the murders were committed by a highly intelligent person, following a specific plan, a detailed design, about midway through the novel, I started to study the principal characters more carefully, believing one of them the killer. Unfortunately, I dismissed the actual killer; his motive, however, will resonate with readers, still a problem within our society.
Because I had never heard of this series, I did some research and discovered Catherine Turnbull's interview with the author published in "Crime Fiction Lover" on September 4, 2017, which provides extensive details on Upton's interest in Josephine Tey, the background for the serial crimes in this novel, revealing Upton as an intelligent, thoughtful writer. I'll be back.