Sorry for the Dead (Josephine Tey Series #8)

Sorry for the Dead (Josephine Tey Series #8)

by Nicola Upson

Narrated by Helen Lloyd

Unabridged — 9 hours, 53 minutes

Sorry for the Dead (Josephine Tey Series #8)

Sorry for the Dead (Josephine Tey Series #8)

by Nicola Upson

Narrated by Helen Lloyd

Unabridged — 9 hours, 53 minutes

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Overview

At once a compelling murder mystery and a moving exploration of love and grief, critically acclaimed author Nicola Upson's eighth Josephine Tey mystery is a force to be reckoned with.

In the summer of 1915, the sudden death of a young girl brings grief and notoriety to Charleston Farmhouse on the Sussex Downs.

Years later, Josephine Tey returns to the same house-now much changed-and remembers the two women with whom she once lodged as a young teacher during the Great War. As past and present collide, with murders decades apart, Josephine is forced to face the possibility that the scandal which threatened to destroy those women's lives hid a much darker secret.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

★ 08/19/2019

Upson’s magnificent eighth whodunit featuring real-life mystery author Josephine Tey (after 2017’s Nine Lessons) finds Josephine in Cambridge, England, in 1938, overseeing the rehearsal of one of her plays when she receives a copy of an upsetting newspaper article. In 1915, at a horticultural college in Sussex, 16-year-old Dorothy Norwood, the twin sister of stage actress Betty Banks, died in an apparent accident in the college’s greenhouse soon after she accused the two women who ran the school of being lovers. Betty, who found Dorothy’s body, is now suggesting that her sister was murdered and insinuates that Josephine, who was a chaperone at the school at the time, is implicated in the crime. Fearful that her own secrets, including her current romantic relationship with a woman, will be exposed, Josephine again turns detective. The significance of the opening, in which an unknown woman commits suicide in 1948, eventually becomes painfully clear. As always, Upson couples an engrossing plot with a nuanced and poignant look at human passions and frailties. Fans of golden-age mysteries will be more than satisfied. Agent: Gráinne Fox, Fletcher & Co. (Oct.)

From the Publisher

Praise for The Body on the Train
“This well-told tale is enriched with vignettes of daily life at a time in England...Readers must be on their toes to catch the subtle hints Brody skillfully drops.”
—Publishers Weekly


"The threads are all pulled neatly together by the end."
Historical Novels Society

Praise for Sorry for the Dead:

"Magnificent...Upson couples an engrossing plot with a nuanced and poignant look at human passions and frailties. Fans of golden-age mysteries will be more than satisfied."
Publishers Weekly, starred review

"Achingly perceptive about forbidden relationships and the unreasoning hatred they can provoke, then as now."
Kirkus Reviews

"Upson’s eighth Josephine Tey mystery intriguingly combines murder with stories of love in the face of hateful bias. A notable addition to this fine series."
Booklist

"A challenging murder mystery...and a strong sense of place combine to make this a fascinating read."
Library Journal

"The skilled writing evokes a deep sense of place; the complex character development intrigues."
Historical Novels Society

"Nuanced [and] sophisticated...it explores thorny social themes with acute insight and polished prose, while ensnaring readers with a gripping plot that keeps them guessing until the last page...A striking novel and a great read."
Thriller Books Journal
 
"[A] superior mystery...About the insanity of war, the muddle and panic of middle age and the corrosive effects of loneliness. The end comes with an avalanche of shocking revelations."
—The Times

"Intriguing...Nicola Upson has done something rather clever...She pays homage to the 'Golden Age' traditions of the genre and is particularly perceptive about the role of women in that era."
Deadly Pleasures Mystery Magazine

Praise for Nine Lessons:
Shortlisted for CWA Best Historical 2018
“Superlative…Upson successfully incorporates moving and complex interpersonal conflicts involving her main characters into an intricate, credible whodunit story line.”
Publishers Weekly, starred review

“Fans of historical British mysteries, such as Jacqueline Winspear’s ‘Maisie Dobbs’ series, will delight in this old-fashioned whodunit starring characters with depth and heart.”
Library Journal

“Accomplished…A skillful blend of fact and fiction with compelling plot lines and vivid evocation of 1937 England.”
Booklist

Library Journal

10/01/2019

In the eighth "Josephine Tey" mystery from Upson (after Nine Lessons), Josephine is directing a play in Cambridge in 1938 when events that occurred during World War I return to haunt her, placing her reputation and her current relationship with screenwriter Marta at risk. At Marta's suggestion, Josephine travels to Sussex to revisit the horticultural college where she taught briefly. The story flashes back to 1915, a stormy night, and an accidental death that may not have been an accident. At the college, Josephine first acknowledges her attraction to women and then sees the consequences of such a relationship as the two women who run the college are vilified in the aftermath of a student's death. As she unravels the mystery of that death, Josephine must also come to terms with her own actions toward another teacher. VERDICT A challenging murder mystery, a look at the social pressures on those who were nonconformists, and a strong sense of place combine to make this a fascinating read. Fans of historical British mystery series and Tey's books will find much to enjoy.—Terry Lucas, Shelter Island P.L., NY

Kirkus Reviews

2019-07-15
Real-life mystery writer Josephine Tey's eighth encounter with fictional crime toggles back and forth between her brush with murder during her early years as a teacher and the time a generation later when the chickens come home to roost.

Hearing about the 1938 London production of Lillian Hellman's The Children's Hour floods Josephine, whose play The Laughing Woman is premiering at Cambridge's Arts Theater, with traumatic memories of the summer of 1915, when rumors about the affair between Georgina Hartford-Wroe and Harriet Barker, partners in the horticultural school Moira House, came to a head with the death of Dorothy Norwood, who, like Hellman's schoolgirl Mary Tilford, had lodged scandalous accusations against George and Harry. Although the coroner's court delivered a verdict of death by misadventure, the damage was done: The neighbors' suspicion and hatred of the couple, fanned by the assumption that Dorothy was murdered, flared out against George and Harry, forcing them to close the school overnight and sending them into exile. In 1938, Daily Mirror reporter Faith Hope, who as Charity Lomax was attending Moira House when the scandal erupted, seeks to resurrect it, linking it to Hellman's well-known play. When she descends on Josephine, the author and playwright has the best reason in the world to bridle, for on the very day Dorothy Norwood died, she consummated her love with fellow teacher Jeanette Sellwood, a secret Charity already seems to know even though Josephine (Sorry for the Dead, 2019, etc.) has never shared it even with her current lover, screenwriter Marta Fox, who helped Alfred Hitchcock bring Tey's 1936 novel, A Shilling for Candles, to the screen as Young and Innocent. When will the scandal of Moira House finally be laid to rest?

Achingly perceptive about forbidden relationships and the unreasoning hatred they can provoke, then as now.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940177513102
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 01/07/2020
Series: Josephine Tey Series , #8
Edition description: Unabridged
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