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Scandal in Belgravia, A

Scandal in Belgravia, A

Author: Barnard, Robert
Publication date: February 29, 2000
Trade paperback: 245 pages
ISBN-10: 1-890208-16-7
ISBN-13: 978-1-890208-16-5

Average rating: 1 2 3 4 5 ( 0 votes)

$14.95 Suggested List Price (w/o tax)

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[PDF] Read the first 30 pages

Peter Proctor is a retired British MP attempting to write his memoirs to stave off boredom. Unfortunately they seem to be creating more problems than he anticipated, and not just of the writers-block variety. Peter keeps getting sidetracked by the death of his friend Timothy Wycliffe, which occurred thirty-odd years before. Tim was allegedly beaten to death by his boyfriend in the posh neighborhood of Belgravia, but the case was never solved. A fascinating look at British society during the 1950's and it's evolution to current times. It's not only brilliantly written, but fast-paced and intriguing as well. A must read for anyone who enjoys a good mystery!

Reviews

"Ever-versatile Barnard (A City of Strangers, etc.) gives us a low-keyed story told by wryly self-deprecating widower and ex- cabinet minister Peter Proctor, now retired and writing memoirs that even he finds boring--until his memory of Timothy Wycliffe is revived. Timothy, son of a prominent politician, was a brilliant charmer, a promiscuous, not very closeted homosexual at a time when that could mean a jail sentence in England. He and Proctor were friends, not lovers, and worked together at the Foreign Office. Then, 30 years ago, at the height of the Suez crisis, Timothy was murdered--according to the police, by his Scottish pal Andrew Forbes, who took off for Spain and was never tried. Here, Proctor is haunted by a feeling that Forbes may have been innocent and sets out to find the truth. The search takes him to Forbes's sister, to Los Angeles, where his own son and grandson live, and finally to Wycliffe's aristocratic family and his still-living father. What he discovers is a shocker--and there's another yet to come. The reader may doubt the ability of Proctor and other characters to recall in detail 30-year-old conversations and events, but Proctor's story is quietly engrossing all the way to its jolting conclusion.

— Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved"

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