Working in her homeless hostel, Sister Agnes is used to dealing with the lost and the vulnerable. But she is shocked when Abbie, a young drug addict, is found dead from an overdose – she’d believed her when she said she was clean. Agnes’s calm life is also challenged by the appearance of a charming American scientist, who knew her father, and who now appears with lots of his writings on evolution that he thinks Agnes should have. When a second hostel resident, Dermot, is found stabbed to death, Agnes begins to fear for the safety of the household. And her suspicions fall in an unlikely place…
Alison Joseph was born and brought up in London. She studied French and Philosophy at Leeds University, and then worked in local radio in Leeds as a producer and presenter. She moved back to London in 1983 and worked for a Channel 4 production company, making short documentaries. In 1985 she set up her own company, Works on Screen. Productions included Through the Devil's Gateway, a series about women and religion presented by Helen Mirren, which was broadcast by Channel 4 in 1989. A book of the series was published by SPCK. Sister Agnes became a reality with the publication of Sacred Hearts in 1994. This was followed by The Hour of Our Death (1995), The Quick and the Dead (1996), A Dark and Sinful Death (1997), The Dying Light (1999) and The Night Watch (2000). All the Sister Agnes books are published by Endeavour Press and Allison & Busby in the UK, and the first three are also available in German. Other novels include Dying to Know (published by Endeavour Press), featuring D I Berenice Killick. Alison is also the author of two novellas in which (a fictional) Agatha Christie is the detective. They are Murder Will Out and Hidden Sins, both published by Endeavour Press. The third is due out Autumn 2016.
Alison has also written short stories for Radio 4, for YOU magazine, for Critical Quarterly and for various women's magazines, as well as abridging novels for Radio 4's Book at Bedtime and The Late Book, including the award-winning production of Captain Corelli's Mandolin. She is the author of about twenty-five plays for BBC Radio 4. Her most recent short story is Samir's Lament, available on Kindle Singles.
Each of the books in the series builds on the one before and on the details of Sister Agnes' life, as in this book in which a visiting American geologist who knew her father brings up memories of her childhood. The development of her character and the choices she makes - and those of her friends - are the most satisfying aspects.
If someone had suggested I read this book I'd have said they were mad. Not my sort at all. It was only by accident I started to read. So beautifully written. This was a true mystery and absolutely gripping. I'll now start at the beginning with book 1 which will fill in some gaps for me. Just brilliant