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A journalist in nineteenth-century New York matches wits with a
serial killer in a gripping thriller by the prizewinning author of
the Ian Hamilton Mysteries. New York, 1880. Elizabeth van den Broek
is the only female reporter at the Herald, the city's most popular
newspaper. Then she and her bohemian friend Carlotta Ackerman find
a woman's body wrapped like a mummy in a freshly dug hole in
Central Park-the intended site of an obelisk called Cleopatra's
Needle. The macabre discovery takes Elizabeth away from the society
pages to follow an investigation into New York City's darkest
shadows. When more bodies turn up, each tied to Egyptian lore,
Elizabeth is onto a headline-making scoop more sinister than she
could have imagined. Her reporting has readers spellbound, and each
new clue implicates New York's richest and most powerful citizens.
And a serial killer is watching every headline. Now a madman with
an indecipherable motive is coming after Elizabeth and everyone she
loves. She wants a good story? She may have to die to get it.
Superstition and murder haunt nineteenth-century Scotland in a
twisting mystery by the prize-winning author of Edinburgh Twilight
and Edinburgh Dusk. Spiritualism has captured the public’s
imagination. Séances are all the rage, and Detective Ian
Hamilton’s otherwise sensible aunt Lillian is not immune to their
allure. But for Ian, indulging her superstitions has its limits.
When members of Lillian’s circle of séance friends begin turning
up dead, Ian doesn’t need a medium to tell him these aren’t
freak accidents. With the help of his friend Arthur Conan Doyle,
Ian investigates, and he is soon drawn into a dark world of
believers and tricksters, and a puzzling series of murders with no
pattern, no motive, and no end in sight. Most alarming, the crimes
conjure up the ghosts of Ian’s own past, including the mysterious
deaths of his parents, which have haunted him for years. As two
cases converge, science collides with the uncanny, and Ian must
confront truths that are more disturbing than he could ever have
imagined.
The prize-winning author of Edinburgh Twilight returns to the
darkening shadows of nineteenth-century Scotland to track a killer
on a profane mission of revenge. A wicked Scottish winter has just
begun when pioneering female physician Sophia Jex-Blake calls on
Detective Inspector Ian Hamilton to investigate the suspicious
death of one of her patients-a railroad lineman who she believes
succumbed to the horrific effects of arsenic poisoning. The most
provocative aspect of the case doesn't escape Hamilton: the married
victim's numerous sexual transgressions. Now, for the first time
since the unexplained fire that killed his parents, Hamilton enters
the Royal Infirmary to gain the insights of brilliant medical
student Arthur Conan Doyle. Then a second poisoning occurs-this
time, a prominent banker who died in the bed of a prostitute. It
appears that someone is making Edinburgh's more promiscuous
citizens pay for their sins. As the body count rises and public
panic takes hold, Hamilton and Doyle delve into the seedy
underbelly of the city, where nothing is as it seems, no one is
immune to murder, and even trusted friends can be enemies in
disguise.
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