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Title details for Blood on the Water by Anne Perry - Available

Blood on the Water

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
As her New York Times bestselling novels always remind us, Anne Perry is a matchless guide to both the splendor and the shame of the British Empire at the height of its influence. In her twentieth William Monk mystery, she brings us to London’s grand Mayfair mansions, where the arrogant masters of the Western world hold sway—and to the teeming Thames waterfront, where one summer afternoon, Monk witnesses the horrifying explosion of the pleasure boat Princess Mary, which sends to their deaths nearly two hundred merrymakers.
 
The tragedy is no accident. As commander of the River Police, Monk should handle the case, but the investigation is turned over to the commissioner of the Metropolitan Police. An Egyptian man is swiftly caught, tried, and sentenced to die. But almost as quickly, Monk presents evidence that Habib Beshara, though a nasty piece of work, was elsewhere at the time of the blast. The investigation, now in complete disarray, is hastily turned over to Monk.
 
Is the crime connected with the soon-to-be-opened Suez Canal, which will enormously benefit wealthy British shipping companies? Or did all of those innocent people drown to ensure the death of just one? How did the bomber board the ship, and how did he manage to escape? Is he an anarchist or a madman?
 
Backed up by his astute wife, Hester, and his old reliable friend Oliver Rathbone, Monk vows to find answers—but instead finds himself treading the dangerous waters of international intrigue, his questions politely turned aside by a formidable array of the powerful and privileged. Events twist and turn like the Thames itself, leading to the shattering moment when Monk realizes, perhaps too late, that he is the next target.
 
Praise for Anne Perry and her William Monk novels
 
Blood on the Water

 
“[An] unfailingly rewarding series.”The New York Times Book Review
 
“Riveting . . . one of Perry’s most engrossing books.”The Washington Times
 
“Tension-filled . . . intricate and densely plotted . . . Victorian London comes alive.”BookPage
Blind Justice
 
“Ranks among the best . . . Perry has written. Her courtroom scenes have the realism of Scott Turow.”—Huntington News
 
A Sunless Sea
 
“Anne Perry’s Victorian mysteries are marvels.”The New York Times Book Review
 
Acceptable Loss
 
“Masterful storytelling and moving dialogue.”The Star-Ledger
 
Execution Dock
 
“[An] engrossing page-turner . . . There’s no one better at using words to paint a scene and then fill it with sounds and smells than Anne Perry.”The Boston Globe
 
Dark Assassin
 
“Brilliant . . . a page-turning thriller . . . blending compelling plotting with superbly realized human emotion and exquisite period detail.”—Jeffery Deaver, author of Edge
 
The Shifting Tide
 
“The mysterious and dangerous waterfront world of London’s ‘longest street,’ the Thames, comes to life.”—South Florida Sun-Sentinel
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 28, 2014
      Bestseller Perry’s 20th William Monk Victorian historical (after 2013’s Blind Justice) opens with a powerful scene. Monk, commander of the Thames River Police, witnesses an explosion aboard a pleasure boat, which rapidly sinks. Despite his heroic efforts to save lives, almost 200 are lost in the tragedy, which the detective quickly concludes wasn’t an accident. To Monk’s dismay, the authorities take the case away from his force and assign it to the London Metropolitan Police. An Egyptian man, Habib Beshara, is charged with planting the bomb that caused the deadly explosion, though his motive is far from clear. Monk has misgivings about Beshara’s guilt, but with the case reassigned and a culprit identified, he can investigate only at risk to his career. The book’s endearing main characters—Monk; his wife, Hester; and their 16-year-old surrogate son, Scuff—help compensate for a mystery with less sociopolitical interest than Perry’s usual. Agent: Donald Maass, Donald Maass Literary Agency.

    • BookPage
      Victorian London comes alive in Anne Perry’s tension-filled new mystery, Blood on the Water, the 20th novel in her best-selling William Monk series. Monk, commander of London’s River Police, is on patrol with his deputy, and the two watch a large pleasure craft as it wafts sounds of music and laughter across the water. Suddenly, they witness a terrible explosion and fire that sinks the boat within minutes, leaving few survivors. Monk’s boat, along with scores of others, become rescue crafts, as they pull ashore those lucky enough to be alive and retrieve nearly 200 bodies of drowned victims. Readers of Perry’s popular series will know that this deliberate act of murder is just the opener for an intricate and densely plotted novel that will involve close detecting by Monk, his wife, Hester, and a number of other neatly described characters, including Scuff, an urchin the couple discovered barely surviving on the streets a few years earlier, and who is now part of their household. Though the tragedy takes place on the river, the case is inexplicably handed over to the city’s Metropolitan Police, and Monk suspects an official cover-up, possibly connected to politics and profits from the newly built Suez Canal. The police arrest an Egyptian man, who is quickly tried and convicted, but evidence later exonerates him, and the bungled case is returned to Monk’s jurisdiction. He now must start from square one to find not only the culprit who set off the explosion but, more importantly, the individual or group behind the horrific but meticulously planned event.  Perhaps due in part to the era in which it’s set, the story is sometimes overcome by a dreary “morality tale” atmosphere, and interactions laden with guilt often predominate. Monk and his determined wife, Hester, are deeply moralistic, not folks you can easily cozy up to. Fortunately, Scuff and his new associate, nicely called Worm, add a bit of lively detail to the strict tone of the book, and any levity comes as a welcome relief. As always, the author’s strength lies in her knowledge of the early Victorian era, which enlivens and adds authentic color to the well-plotted narrative. Every detail of custom and costume is carefully aligned with 1860s England, with its teeming streets, polluted waterways and deeply rooted class structure and social mannerisms.

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