Edward Marston has produced another exciting adventure in the Home Front Detective series that admirably captures the simmering intensity of life during World War I, when despite the fighting going on, crimes were still being committed in the capital.
Enter Detective Inspector Harvey Marmion and his trusty Sergeant Joe Keedy. They are required in this instance because while German bombers are dropping their load on London, a body is fished out of the River Thames. The identity of the victim is unknown so the detectives' first task is to identify him. This leads the duo to friends, family and business acquaintances and unravels a tangled web of private and business activities that prove more difficult to sort out than Marmion imagines.
And while this investigation is ongoing, with the detectives spending their time between London and Birmingham, vicious gang warfare breaks out in the East End of London and this also needs police activity with another officer, Clifford Burge, being recommended by Marmion to take on the job. And to complicate matters another unidentified body is discovered in the Thames, which throws an additional burden on the prime investigation.
In addition Marmion has personal problems as his son is still missing and he has to try to support his wife, Ellen, and daughter, Alice, as they investigate the boy's disappearance following his injury during fighting on the Somme. And Marmion's daughter is having trouble with her romance with Joe Keedy and that increases the tension that is building in the Marmion household, which is not helped by another sub-plot in that Alice, a policewoman, is partnered by a policewoman who is involved in an awkward relationship and continually wants to discuss it with her while they are on the beat.
But Marmion juggles and manages all the pieces successfully so that his boss, Superintendent Chatfield, is able to congratulate him on another job well done.