THE SITE FOR DIE HARD CRIME & THRILLER FANS
Book Club

A Madras Miasma

1 Mins read
Madras Miasma

Set in the eponymous Indian city just after World War I, the green shoots of India’s desire for independence are pushing through. Superintendent Christian Le Fanu is in self-imposed exile from England, and is summoned to investigate when the body of a white woman is found in one of the city’s insanitary canals. Sensing the possible political repercussions, Le Fanu must walk on egg-shells, and he discovers that it’s not the Indians who are corrupt but his white countrymen. The ex-pat community’s veneer of respectability conceals a plethora of crimes – some small, others truly evil. Le Fanu is a completely credible and fully fleshed-out character, and the sights, sounds and smells of a vibrant colonial past are described with wit and conviction. Our full review is here.


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related posts
KindlePrintReviews

Murder in the Scottish Highlands by Dee MacDonald

Bed, breakfast and… butchery? It’s not exactly what Ally McKinley had in mind when she decamped from Edinburgh to run a guesthouse in the picturesque village of Locharran in the Scottish Highlands, but she soon discovers that murder and the solving thereof offer a great…
iBookKindlePrintReviews

Precipice by Robert Harris

Robert Harris launched his career writing fiction with Fatherland in 1992, speculative historical piece that looked at what might have happened had the Nazis won World War II. For over 30 years, his historical thrillers and espionage novels have gained a huge following. In his…
KindlePrintReviews

Last Night at Villa Lucia by Simon McCleave

What could be more appealing than a murder mystery set in an elegant villa high on a hill overlooking the Tuscan countryside? Prolific crime novelist Simon McCleave’s Last Night at Villa Lucia feels like a vacation from the first page, as the villa’s English owner…
Crime Fiction Lover