William Monk, the unquestionably handsome, somewhat vain, but genuinely tender-hearted "agent of enquiry" is back on the streets of Victorian London, investigating his 10th case, a missing woman. Miriam Gardiner was due to be betrothed to a much younger man, a well-to-do gentleman named Lucius Stourbridge. But during a family croquet party, the bride-to-be vanished, apparently fleeing in a coach driven by a family servant named Treadwell. Perhaps just a simple case of pre- wedding jitters, Monk would normally be reluctant to take on such a seemingly dull case but his own recent marriage to the headstrong nurse Hester Latterly gives Monk a new- found empathy for the heartbroken Lucius. Of course as is tradition in Perry's historical mysteries, all is not quite as it seems. Treadwell is found murdered and the missing Miriam becomes the number one suspect. Monk is convinced that she "could and would do no intentional evil", even as Hester connects her to another illicit crime. Eventually unearthed by London's finest, Miriam is arrested and charged with murder. It's up to barrister Oliver Rathbone to absolve her in court (with a little help from his good friends William and Hester Monk).
With a plot twist around every corner, Anne Perry knows just how to keep us in suspense, right up to the exceedingly dramatic finale. The Twisted Root is a luminous whodunit from the queen of the Victorian mystery. --Naomi Gesigner
This is a story with twists and turns aplenty. The ending is the biggest twist of all.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch When a law flies in the face of moral justice, can a person be condemned for defying it even to the point of murder? Anne Perry argues the issue with uncommon eloquence.
The New York Times Book Review
No one is better known for portraying Victorian life and social mores.
The Denver Post Perry carries the suspense right into the last few pages.
The Christian Science Monitor Anne Perry is [a] master of crime fiction who rarely fails to deliver a strong story and a colorful cast of characters. Baltimore
Sun"
"This is a story with twists and turns aplenty. The ending is the biggest twist of all."--
St. Louis Post-Dispatch "When a law flies in the face of moral justice, can a person be condemned for defying it--even to the point of murder? Anne Perry argues the issue with uncommon eloquence."--
The New York Times Book Review
"No one is better known for portraying Victorian life and social mores."--
The Denver Post "Perry carries the suspense right into the last few pages."--
The Christian Science Monitor "Anne Perry is [a] master of crime fiction who rarely fails to deliver a strong story and a colorful cast of characters."--Baltimore
Sun