'Henrietta McKervey is a storyteller of rare gifts. Violet Hill is a wonderfully assured and compelling novel, so evocative of a London that has long ceased to be, yet crackling on every page with urgently contemporary resonance and meaning. I could not put it down.' Joseph O'Connor
December 1918: Post-War London is grieving, the city a wound whose dressing was taken off too soon. Violet Hill, the only female private detective in the city, is hired by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's business manager to uncover spiritual trickery he believes is deceiving his employer.
January 2018: Susanna is a super-recogniser, one of an elite Met Police team of officers with extraordinary powers for facial recognition. When a freak injury causes her unusual ability to suddenly disappear, a dangerous criminal whom she no longer recognises decides to close in.
Compelling stories across two eras weave into this page-turning, literary adventure of identity, deception, danger - and detection.
'McKervey is a skilful, intelligent storyteller who looks at the world from fresh perspectives; she raises questions about the gap between appearance and reality, truth and fiction, surveillance and security that will stay with a reader long after they finish reading this novel.' Lia Mills
Set in 2 different era's this is a terrific read. London 1918 the great war is over and now many are turning to spiritualists to make contact with their dead loved ones. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle becomes enthralled with one such person and his business manager hires London's only female pi Violet Hill to expose him as a fraud. But after an incident at one of his meetings Violet realises she may not be able to do this. December 2017 Susanna is a super recogniser for the police. After a freak accident she loses this ability. With time off work she begins to explore the history of her apartment block and discovers a link to Violet. But her own life may be in danger. Excellent read.
I found this quite confusing, I usually like books set on 2 different timelines but this one didn't work for me. It follows Violet a female private and investigator in the year 1919 and Suzanne a super recogniser for the police 100 years later. The 2 stories really didn't gel and I found myself getting quite bored with the story.
This caught my eye whilst out and I am so glad I picked it up and read this. I thought it was a great read. It took me a while to get into it, but I think that's more me to be honest and the last half in particular really ramps up. I loved how the stories set in 1918/1919 and 2018 tie in. An eye opener in post war Britain that I wasn't aware of.
A great, different kind of detective read. After discovering this I would definitely read more from this author.
Struggled to understand this tale... maybe I've just got a jumbled head at the moment!! I found it hard to connect to characters and couldn't follow the story easily. Not very engaged in this one...