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Canons

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At dawn on a July morning, the body of a Roman Catholic priest, Duncan Aster, is found in the shallows of a lake in Cumbria, UK. His final email refers enigmatically to a woman called Susan and an Anglican priest from Ontario. The priest, Andrew Moore, turns out to be Aster’s last known contact. He won’t assist the police inquiry nor will he speak about the matter with his bishop. As the battleground between Bishop Azikiwe and Reverend Moore develops, Cumbria Police decide to send an officer to Canada to observe a disciplinary hearing held in Hamilton, Ontario; a court of canon law.

348 pages, Kindle Edition

Published October 28, 2019

About the author

Allan Jones

19 books5 followers
I grew up in Merseyside, England, became a chemist, moved in the 1980s to Canada and recently retired. I started creative writing several years ago.

Oct 2019 update. My newest novel is a 'stand alone', not part of the Catrin Sayer series. Called 'Canons', it is set partly in the Lake District UK, partly in Hamilton, Ontario. A key element is a modern church trial; a court of canon law. But it begins with a body in a lake near Keswick...

My published novels so far are about a young Welsh detective, Catrin Sayer, who works in an Art Crime Unit at New Scotland Yard. 'The Chinese Sailor' is partly set in North Wales. The second in the series, 'The Scottish Colourist' is in Glasgow and the third, 'The Falmouth Model, moves the events to Cornwall and, towards the end, Malaysia. The fourth in the series, 'The Carnforth Double' picks up the end of the third but moves quickly to London, and an investigation of the theft of paintings from a merchant bank. The last novel published in November 2016 deals with a strange painting found in mid-Wales - 'The Powys Deacon.

The series follows the life and career of Catrin Sayer, both the ups and the downs, from her decision to become a police officer in London after graduation from university with an arts degree. I try to make both the characters 'real people' as each art mystery unfolds; no macabre violence, serial psychopaths or detectives with no life outside work. But interesting characters, I think, nonetheless, some of which crop up in each book.

I hope you have a look at them if you like traditional British detective mysteries.

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