Blood of the South (Aelf Fen[6])
Clare Alys
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Blood on the Strand (Thomas Chaloner[2])
GREGORY Susanna
The second adventure in the Thomas Chaloner seriesRebellion is in the air of London in the spring of 1663.Thomas Chaloner, spy for the King's intelligence service, has just returned from thwarting a planned revolt in Dublin, but soon realises that England's capital is no haven of peace. He is ordered to investigate the shooting of a beggar during a royal procession. He soon learns the man is no vagrant, but someone with links to the powerful Company of Barber-Surgeons. Chaloner’s master, the Earl of Clarendon, is locked in a deadly feud with the Earl of Bristol, and an innocent man is about to be hanged in Newgate. Chaloner is embroiled in a desperate race against time to protect Clarendon, to discover the true identity of the beggar's murderer, and to save a blameless man from the executioner's noose.
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Blood on the Water (William Monk[20])
Perry Anne
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Bloodstone (Sorrowful Mysteries of Brother Athelstan[11])
Doherty Paul
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Bloody Relations (Marc Edwards[5])
Gutteridge Don
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Bloody Winter (Pyke mystery[5])
Pepper Andrew
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Bodies Politic (Marcus Corvinus[13])
Wishart David
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Bone Rattler (A Mystery of Colonial America[1])
Pattison Eliot
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Brother Cadfael's Penance (Brother Cadfael[20])
Peters Ellis
For Brother Cadfael in the autumn of his life, the mild November of our Lord’s year 1145 may bring a bitter — and deadly — harvest. England is torn between supporters of the Empress Maud and those of her cousin Stephen. The civil strife is about to jeopardize not only Cadfael’s life, but his hopes of Heaven. While Cadfael has sometimes bent the abbey’s rules, he has never broken his monastic vows—until now. Word has come to Shrewsbury of a treacherous act that has left thirty of Maud’s knights imprisoned. All have been ransomed except Cadfael’s secret son, Olivier de Bretagne. Conceived in Cadfael’s soldiering youth and unaware of his father’s identity, Olivier will die if he is not freed. Like never before, Cadfael must boldly defy the abbot. The good brother forsakes the order to follow his heart—but what he finds will challenge his soul.
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Buckingham Palace Gardens (Thomas Pitt[25])
Perry Anne
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Bundori: A Novel Of Japan
Rowland Laura Joh
From Publishers WeeklyBrutal murders linked to an ancient betrayal send late 17th-century Tokyo into a panic. They also spell big trouble for the Shogun's special investigator, Sano Ichiro, in this sequel to Rowland's well-received first novel, Shinju. The killings are made known when the severed heads of the victims are put on public display, in the manner of an ancient custom known as bundori, or war trophy. The victims are descendants of warriors who, more than a century earlier, were involved in the murder of a powerful warlord. As the killings continue, Sano, though hampered in his investigation by his devotion to the warrior-code of bushido and its precepts of silent obedience and service, suspects three of the most powerful men in the Shogunate, including Chamberlain Yanagisawa. Also complicating Sano's quest for the truth is a female ninja in Yanagisawa's power; aiding it are an eager young officer in the Tokyo police and a quirky old morgue attendant. Sano's allegiance to bushido makes him an unexpectedly passive hero, undermining the author's apparent attempt to wed Japanese philosophy to Western mystery-thriller conventions. But the novel reads smoothly and positively smokes with historical atmospherics.From Library JournalPart historical novel, part detective story, and part romance, Rowland's sequel to Shinju (LJ, 8/94) features, once again, the samurai detective Sano Ichiro, working for the shogun of the city of Edo in Tokugawa-era Japan. Several questionable plot devices effectively remove the novel from the detective genre, but the story is well constructed and compulsively readable. Sano must track down, virtually single-handedly, a serial killer who is at work in the region and whose motivation is complex, related to events of 129 years prior. The detective's job is complicated by court intrigue, increasingly so as his clues point toward suspects of influence. The richness of the historical detail adds enormously to the novel, and the reader comes away with a highly visual sense of life in feudal Japan. An enjoyable light reading experience, recommended for public libraries and popular reading collections.David Dodd, Univ. of Colorado Libs., Colorado Springs
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By Murder's bright light (Sorrowful Mysteries of Brother Athelstan[5])
Doherty Paul
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Ça baigne dans le béton (Le Commissaire San-Antonio[135])
Dard Frédéric
M. Blanc m'avait pourtant prévenu : « Quand on entre dans le grosso modo du Lion, rien ne va plus ! Une période de haute merde commence. »Tout foire : les femmes les plus choucardes deviennent tartes comme un plat de furoncles et les mecs les plus virils se mettent à goder comme des cravates !Voilà pourquoi, ayant à charge de protéger un couple de vieux kroums gâtochards, nous nous retrouvons, mes potes et moi, avec quatre cadavres sur les brandillons.Moi, tu me connais ? Au début, je ne voulais pas y croire, cartésien comme il est, ton Sana.Seulement, j'ai vite pigé ma douleur !On vit une époque épique, je te jure !
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Cain His Brother
Perry Anne
In his family life, Angus Stonefield had been gentle and loving; in business, a man of probity; and in his relationship with his twin brother, Caleb, a virtual saint. Now Angus is missing, and it appears more than possible that Caleb-a creature long since abandoned to depravity-has murdered him.Hired to find the missing man, William Monk puts himself into his shoes, searching for clues to Angus's fate and his vicious brother's whereabouts. Slowly, Monk inches toward the truth-and also, unwittingly, toward the destruction of his good name and livelihood…
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Cain His Brother (William Monk[6])
Perry Anne
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Callander Square (Thomas Pitt[2])
Perry Anne
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Candle Flame (Sorrowful Mysteries of Brother Athelstan[13])
Doherty Paul
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Cardington Crescent (Thomas Pitt[8])
Perry Anne
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Carnival (St.Cyr and Kohler[15])
Janes J. Robert
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Carousel (St.Cyr and Kohler[2])
Janes J. Robert
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