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Hardcover Last Nocturne: A Mystery Book

ISBN: 0312577931

ISBN13: 9780312577933

Last Nocturne: A Mystery

What could make a successful, happily married man take a gun and shoot himself? What made a young artist on the brink of fame throw himself to his death? These are the questions facing Chief Inspector Lamb and his assistant, Detective Sergeant Cogan. Neither victim left a note behind to explain what drove him to take his own life, and it appears that nothing untoward had occurred in the weeks preceding their deaths. Having briefly met both victims,...

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Format: Hardcover

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"The truth is rarely plain and never simple."

"Last Nocturne," by Marjorie Eccles, is set in Austria and England in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. Twenty-two year old Grace Thurley, the pretty and independent daughter of a deceased member of the clergy, has decided to break her engagement and become the social secretary of her mother's old friend, Mrs. Edwina Martagon, in London. Grace is ready to leave home and spread her wings. After all, "in a new age when women were climbing mountains in Switzerland and trekking through Africa, anything was possible." If adventure is what she wants, Grace is not disappointed. When she takes up her new post, she finds a family in upheaval. Edwina is the widow of Eliot Martagon, the owner of an art gallery who, much to the shock of his relatives and friends, apparently committed suicide six months earlier. When the body of an artist who exhibited in Eliot's gallery is also found dead, apparently by his own hand, Oxford-educated Chief Inspector Philip Lamb ("one of the newer breed of policemen") and his colleague, Detective Sergeant Cogan, try to determine what is really behind this pair of untimely deaths. Eccles enriches her story by moving back and forth in time, showing how events in the past led to the tragedies that followed. In addition, she touches on the crusade for women's rights, anti-Semitism in Vienna, the origins of World War I, and the daring ways in which provocative young artists expressed themselves after the Industrial Revolution. Throughout, Eccles never loses sight of the thoughts and emotions that motivate her large cast of characters, including thirty-year-old Guy Martagon, Eliot's moody and enigmatic son; Mrs. Isobel Amberley, a beautiful widow whose passionate involvement with a married man leads to disaster; and Sophie, an unhappy little girl who is largely ignored by her self-absorbed and wanton mother. The author's use of figurative language is deliciously evocative. She describes Isobel's feelings this way: "They came, these sensuous, almost unbearable moments of unexpected awareness, like little poisoned darts, sharp enough to pierce the carefully contrived carapace she's built...." "Last Nocturne" satisfies on many levels--as a work of historical and romantic fiction, an engrossing mystery, and an intense psychological study of lives in turmoil.

"Maybe life could deal you a better hand if you sometimes followed your heart rather than your head.

In The Last Nocturne, Marjorie Eccles links the deaths of two men to the lives of an aristocratic Edwardian family, her characters treading the foggy streets of central London while also reveling in the art of turn-of-the-century Vienna where impoverished artists eke out a living and love and loss take place in the shadows of an impending war. Despite her mother's better judgment, and her long acquaintance with Edwina Martagon, a letter appears out of the blue from wealthy socialite Edwina Martagon asking if her dearest friend would be prepared to let Grace help her out. Placed in service in Edwina's house in London to assist her with her voluminous correspondence and the details of her extremely bus social life, Grace soon finds herself enveloped in enough a complicated web of secrets and lies centering around the Martagon family. Although Edwina is preoccupied making preparations for her daughter Dulcie's coming out, she's till devastated over the death of her husband Eliot, an artist manqué, who had hung around the fringes of the art world promoting those more talented than himself. He has recently developed a vested interest in the small and exclusive Pontifex Gallery, just off Bond street. There was never any satisfactory explanation for why Eliot Martagon, a man in excellent health, his life flourishing should have shot himself dead six months ago. He'd left no note and the interests of propriety, a verdict of accidental death while cleaning his gun more acceptable than suicide had eventually been given. Grace, our eyes and ears and our cipher for much of what goes on in Embury Square. She expected her time there to be plain sailing, although this proves to be a far more elusive concept. Edwina is over bearing and demanding, gravitating between a rigid self-control and sense of loss; while Dulcie harbors a desperate frustrated ambition to be an artist. Grace takes to Dulcie, but she's also caught the attentions of Edwina's son Guy Martagon. Lean, loose-limbed, elegant and moody, Guy is more interested in winding up his father's affairs and of righting the worlds wrongs. An enigmatic personality, he beguiles grace with his exotic adventures in foreign parts that had kept him away from hone for years. In tight, muscular prose, Eccles shepherds her characters through the early days of their loss before reality catches up with them. Events become even more complicated when Chief Inspector Philip Lamb is called to investigate the apparent suicide of a young man Theo Benton, twenty-five years old, destroyed by his own hand. Theo plummeted to a premature and unnecessary death from a terrace in Adelaide Crescent. A young man at the very height of his success, a painter with a growing reputation, he was also exhibiting his work at the Pontifex gallery and had been working on a series of paintings - nocturnes he called them, similar only in that they were all painted towards dusk, each painted what to the casual eye is nothing but a shadow. F

entertaining Edwardian Era police procedural

In 1909, Grace Thurley ends her engagement; leaving Birmingham for London where she has accepted a position as secretary to recently widowed Edwina Martagon and companion to her daughter Dulcie. As she settles into the Martagon household, Edwina's son Guy comes home to settle the estate of his late father, an art gallery owner who committed suicide. When an artist, whose works were on display at Martagon's gallery, also kills himslef, Scotland Yard revisits the previous case as Chief Inspector Philip Lamb and his assistant Detective Sergeant Cogan find two similar suicides too coincidental and besides no motives existed for either man; one was at the top of his game and the other a rising star. At the same time someone is blackmailing Grace due to love letters her spouse sent to his paramour and that rumors are he sired a child in Vienna two decades earlier. Vienna is where a Mrs. Isobel Amberley seems to be the eye of the hurricane who apparently led to the deaths of the late gallery owner and the deceased artist. Marjorie Eccles provides her fans with an entertaining Edwardian Era police procedural. The flashbacks of what occurred in Vienna twenty years earlier enable the audience to know why the two men died long before the cops figure out what is going on. The background is terrific as the reader can compare two leading European cities just before and after the turn of the previous century. Although the look back to Vienna is fascinating, but also slows down the present day (1909 that is) mystery. Still this is a fine investigative tale in which Superintendent Gil Mayo would be proud of the efforts of his DS predecessor. Harriet Klausner
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