Review:
Denton is an interesting, if still undeveloped, personality. Struggling to earn a living as a writer, he socialises with the bohemian crowd in their fashionable haunts such as the Café Royal, but is equally at home walking the dangerous streets of London's East End. He is well worth encountering again. (THE TELEGRAPH)
Not only is it a refreshing change from ¿usual suspects¿ like Prince Albert Victor, Sir William Gull, Walter Sickert, Lewis Carroll, and recently Frank Miles, but it also smacks of verisimilitude, so essential for writers of crime fiction. It is a wise decision, artfully delivered, and the The Frightened Man is a worthy addition to the subgenre from a confident, competent author. (THE TANGLED WEB)
Book Description:
A stylish, highly intelligent and darkly compelling Edwardian crime novel featuring an engagingly original author hero.
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