Kirkus Reviews QR Code
MR CAMPION'S SÉANCE by Mike Ripley

MR CAMPION'S SÉANCE

by Mike Ripley

Pub Date: Aug. 4th, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-7278-8961-4
Publisher: Severn House

Albert Campion must work with a succession of three friends on the Metropolitan Police on a slow-motion case that takes more than 20 years to unfold and resolve.

Apart from her uncanny resemblance to Agatha Christie, Evadne Childe, the doyenne of British whodunits, is a generally unremarkable widow—her archaeologist husband, Edmund Walker-Pyne, was one of the first casualties of World War II—with a single remarkable talent: the ability to write novels that predict in uncanny detail some real-life crimes. Her perverse gift first reveals itself in 1946, when The Bottle Party Murders provides a blueprint for the robbery and murder of Tony Valetta, the shady owner of the Grafton Club, who was killed weeks after she submitted her manuscript to Veronica Hatherall, her longtime editor at J.P. Gilpin & Co. Alerted to this outrage by his old friend Superintendent Stanislaus Oates, Campion talks to Rags Donovan, the Grafton cigarette girl who saw Evadne with Pierre Le Frog, the mystery man who introduced her to the club, ostensibly for the purposes of research. Six years later, his conversation bears unexpected fruit when Rags is strangled on her way to a meeting with Campion shortly after she’s reported glimpsing Le Frog again—and shortly before Evadne’s latest novel, Camera Obscuring, predicts the particulars of another crime. Nettled, Campion sets a trap that involves a medium, a pearl necklace, and a long-dead imaginary cousin of his wife’s. As usual in Ripley’s pastiches, things don’t go exactly as he’d planned, and it’ll be another 10 years before the case is wrapped up.

Wicked fun, sedate yet intricately plotted—a highlight in the series.