I've been waiting for The Curse of The House of Foskett to come out, eager to revisit the dynamic duo - personal detective Sidney Grice and his ward, the young March Middleton. And I was not disappointed. Yet again we're taken on a great ride into Victorian London and the brutality and horrors that lurk. Sidney Grice still has a love for tea and soggy vegetables and is as sharp and arrogant as ever, and March is every bit as plain, feisty and heart broken as in The Mangle Street Murders.
This time around Sidney Grice and March get involved in investigating the brutal murders of the members of the Final Death Society - a club where the last man, or woman, standing will inherit the large sums the other members has contributed to the fund. The members of the Final Death Society has as a precaution agreed that Sidney Grice is to be engaged to investigate their deaths to prevent and/or solve possible murders within the society.
When the first member dies shortly after the founding of the society, Sidney gets a visit from another member, Horatio Green, but before the visit is over Mr. Green himself has suffered a horrible death and in the process ruined the rug Sidney Grice got as a present from Napoleon III. Grice is not happy about the ruined rug or the involvement with "an association of fools with large estates and microscopic traces of common sense" but to his surprise Baroness Foskett, the mother of his childhood friend Rupert, is a member, and so he feels obliged to look into the matter. All too soon it becomes clear that despite hiring Grice, the members of the society seem to die like flies in ever more horrible ways when he and March are around, and the clues points in all directions as the bodies pile.
Again the tone is unique and quite hilarious at times, and Molly and Inspector Pound from the previous book are still around to add to the development of the characters and plot. March still writes her diary and Sidney still reads it when he sees fit, and underneath the fun lurks hints of sadness and more serious issues of loss and longing for love and family.
Thankfully the book closes with a couple of cliff hangers and unanswered questions, so I'm confident there will be at least one more book with this, despite themselves, utterly charming duo. I'm hooked.