Bullen Hall, a stately home in rural Norfolk where Anne Boleyn spent her childhood, is desperately in need of repair and extra funding. A new curator, Chad Shelden, is brought in to do the job, and to write the biography of Laz Appleyard, a hero in the Hungarian fight against communism and ancestor of the current residents of the hall. But, shortly after his arrival, the young, romantic and artistic Shelden is found dead in the moat, apparently having fallen from the roof before being attacked by eels in the water.
No one suspects murder - at least not until the results of the autopsy come in. Fleeting passions, incest, present conflicts and family reputations are all compelling motives – but are they enough to drive anyone to murder someone they’ve just met? It's up to Detective Inspector Ben Jurnet to unravel the truth from among the dark stories surrounding Bullen Hall.
"One of the purest lyric voices in the mystery field" New York Times Book Review
Sylvia Theresa Haymon was born in Norwich, and is best known for her eight crime fiction novels featuring the character Inspector Ben Jurnet. Haymon also wrote two non-fiction books for children, as well as two memoirs of her childhood in East Anglia.
The Ben Jurnet series enjoyed success in both the UK and the US during Haymon’s lifetime: Ritual Murder (1982) won the prestigious CWA Silver Dagger Award from the Crime Writers' Association. Stately Homicide (1984), a skilful variation on the country house mystery, was praised by the New York Times as a 'brilliantly crafted novel of detection...stylish serious fiction', and favourably compared to the work of Dorothy L. Sayers.
Detective Inspector Ben Jurnet is visiting Bullen Hall in the Norfolk countryside to collect some earrings which he has commissioned for his girlfriend Miriam from a jeweller who has one of the workshops on the estate. He is invited to attend the party that evening for the departing curator and as he is at a loose end he decides to do so even though he hardly knows anyone who will be there. After the party the new curator, Chad Shelden, is found dead in the moat and Jurnet is sent to investigate.
It is soon clear that many of the people attending the party are potential suspects in a case of did he fall or was he pushed? Jurnet is morose and missing Miriam who is on holiday in the Greek islands and finds having met all his suspects in a social setting is something of a disadvantage. Many secrets both from the recent and the distant past are going to come to light and more people will be dead before the mystery is solved. Those familiar with Norfolk will have no difficulty in identifying the stately home on which Bullen Hall is based.
I enjoyed reading this well written and well plotted country house mystery and I thought the ending was exciting and atmospheric. The mixture of characters is very well handled and I really liked Percy the reformed burglar and his new found interest in literature. The twists and turns of the Appleyard family history is well done as is the like to the long dead Anne Boleyn. If you like classic crime novels in the tradition of the Golden Age of British crime fiction then try S T Haymon – a much underrated author in my opinion. The series can be read in any order.
Ah, the good old days when sexual sin incorporated "adulterer, sodomite, lesbian and rapist" all in one category. The book was written in the 1980s but has a much more old fashioned feel to it - and not in a good way. With its combination of a slow moving plot, a not particularly appealing detective who, it seems, is meant to be an ordinary bloke but at times comes across as merely vulgar, and the heavy-handed treatment of its "deviancy" theme, it wasn't one for me!