Published by Sapere Books,
9 December 2025.
ISBN: 979-0-831160997-5 (PB)
This is the fourth novel
in Briggs’s Gothic Mystery series,
all of which feature a remote country house in the northwest of England and the
effects of the Great War on its inhabitants and the people who live near it.
This novel begins with a prologue set in 1932. Catherine Sisley is looking back
to events which occurred immediately after the war, and the reader is tantalized
with what mysteries there were at Raven’s Gaze Hall. During the war Catherine
nursed at the front where one of her patients was John Lestrange, heir to
Raven’s Gaze. When she returns home to Dorset (where she has been brought up by
an aunt) after the war, Catherine is mourning the death of her love, Captain
Leo Beaufort, and is trying to work out her future. Lestrange writes to her
asking if she will come to Raven’s Gaze to nurse his infirm grandmother.
Encouraged by her aunt, but with some reluctance, she takes up the offer on an
initial three-month trial basis.
When Catherine arrives at Raven’s
Gaze, she finds its remoteness and inhabitants unsettling. Bennet Lestrange,
John’s father, is a dislikeable character who spends most of his time
researching and writing books about local history. Mrs Whitenow, Catherine’s
patient, is not an easy woman. Mrs Slee, the housekeeper, is unpleasant and
deals out ‘rough insolence’. Her niece, Betty, who helps around the hall, is no
better. John, cowed by his father, is frequently away on unexplained business
leaving Catherine feeling very isolated. There is mystery concerning the deaths
of John’s mother and brother some time previously, any mention of whom is
avoided as far as possible. Catherine discovers an abandoned nursery and a room
with a bed in which a patient had clearly been restrained. As Bennet Lestrange
observes at one point, ‘We all have our secrets’. Catherine’s only friends are
two local women, Annot Syke and Grizel Knipe.
Catherine feels she is under
permanent scrutiny at Raven’s Gaze, and this, combined with her revulsion at
the tense atmosphere (nobody seems to like anyone else), makes her determined
to leave. Unfortunately, events conspire to keep Catherine at the house. Her
personal circumstances alter in an ultimately unsatisfactory way. There are
deaths, and a will makes Catherine’s position even more difficult. By this
point her two friends have moved away, She is on her own.
The last section of the novel
returns, as it were, to 1932 and events consequent to the prologue. By this
time both Annot Syke and Grizel Knipe have returned to Raven’s Gaze and ask
Catherine to visit them. They are able to tell some of the secrets that were
kept from her, and between them the three women manage to unravel one
particular mystery which has hovered, almost unspoken, throughout the story.
The discover other things as well. It is a very satisfying conclusion. As in
the previous novels, Briggs writes with considerable sympathy, intelligence and
a keenly researched sense of the period (as ever she provides some interesting
notes at the end). She is particularly good at yearning, loss and oppression –
and mystery, of course. Strong, confident and decent women ultimately prevail,
but Briggs is far too even-handed a writer to make it a feminist polemic. The
bleakness of much of the story is leavened by the decency at the end of it. It
is an excellent novel which I am happy to recommend wholeheartedly.
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Reviewer: David Whittle

Jean
Briggs taught English for many years
in schools in Cheshire, Hong Kong, and Lancashire. She now lives in a cottage
by a river in Cumbria with a view of the Howgill Fells and a lot of sheep,
though it is the streets of Victorian London that are mostly in her mind when
she is writing about Charles Dickens as a detective. There are eleven novels in
the series so far, published by Sapere Books. The latest,
The Jaggard Case,
came out in October 2022. Number eleven,
The Waxwork Man, comes out on
September 15
th. Another novel will come out at the end of 2023. This
is a new departure, a novel about an empty house called Foulstone in the old
county of Westmorland, a house with secrets kept since the First World War. She was Vice Chair of the Crime Writers’ Association
(2018-2022), is still a board member of the CWA, a member of Historical
Writers’ Association, the Dickens Fellowship, The Society of Authors, and a
trustee of Sedbergh Book Town.
jcbriggsbooks.com
David Whittle is firstly a musician (he is an organist and was
Director of Music at Leicester Grammar School for over 30 years) but has always
enjoyed crime fiction. This led him to write a biography of the composer Bruce
Montgomery who is better known to lovers of crime fiction as Edmund Crispin,
about whom he gives talks now and then.