Description

Book Synopsis

“Three hundred years ago, Lord Carpenter, I’d have had your head on a spike on Tower Hill..”

It is 1938 and newspaper chief Lord Carpenter is about to publish a front-page story that will guarantee war with Russia. But before the paper can go to print, he is found stabbed in his office, and circumstances suggest the killer is one of his staff. Everyone from the editor-in-chief to the staff librarian had the opportunity. But was the motivation for the murder political or personal?

Crime reporter Charles Venables finds himself both suspect and sleuth as he tries to disentangle the clues and determine which of his colleagues is the guilty party. Red herrings abound, but it soon becomes apparent that more than one person had a reason to want Carpenter dead….

Fatality in Fleet Street displays the author’s trademark wit and a plot with plenty of twists and ingenuity to please the reader. Equally interesting are the political overtones and the militaristic pretensions of the deceased newspaper baron. The novel is set in 1938 – five years later than its real publication date – and presents a Russia whose economy is growing, which makes the country ‘a real menace to the established order of things’ in Carpenter’s worldview. Although the imperious newspaper baron meets his demise early on, his outsized personality and ambition are the bedrock that propels the story. Sprigg makes his satire clear; there is more than a passing resemblance between the fictional Lord Carpenter and the real world Max Aitken, Lord Beaverbrook, owner of the Evening Standard and Daily Express.

Sprigg started his career as a cub reporter and the book’s setting of a busy newspaper is well realised. Fatality also takes a sardonic view of socialist activity in Britain. When Venables goes to investigate a local chapter of the Communist Party, the situation is alternately threatening and farcical, with members parading their revolutionary credentials and loudly denouncing the ‘bourgeois’. Sprigg later became an active member of the Communist Party and published Marxist literary criticism, but his gently mocking tone in Fatality suggests this conversion was some way off in 1933.



Table of Contents
Introduction 1: A Prime Minister Threatens 2: A Reporter Protests 3: A Magnate is Murdered 4: A Pathologist is Uneasy 5: Newspaper Cuttings Behave Oddly 6: The Editor Regrets 7: A Chinaman is Helpful 8: Russians are Mysterious 9: A Secretary is Frank 10: A Detective is Arrested 11: A News Editor is Suspicious 12: A Deputy Commissioner is Astonished 13: A Young Lady is in Love 14: The Accused is Unhelpful 15: A Landlady is Helpful 16: A Trial Begins 17: An Editor Struggles 18: A Court is Electrified 19: A Wife Betrays 20: A Judge is Angry 21: A Truth is Revealed

Fatality in Fleet Street

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A Paperback / softback by Christopher St John Sprigg

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    View other formats and editions of Fatality in Fleet Street by Christopher St John Sprigg

    Publisher: Moonstone Press
    Publication Date: 00/01/2019
    ISBN13: 9781899000067, 978-1899000067
    ISBN10: 1899000062

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    “Three hundred years ago, Lord Carpenter, I’d have had your head on a spike on Tower Hill..”

    It is 1938 and newspaper chief Lord Carpenter is about to publish a front-page story that will guarantee war with Russia. But before the paper can go to print, he is found stabbed in his office, and circumstances suggest the killer is one of his staff. Everyone from the editor-in-chief to the staff librarian had the opportunity. But was the motivation for the murder political or personal?

    Crime reporter Charles Venables finds himself both suspect and sleuth as he tries to disentangle the clues and determine which of his colleagues is the guilty party. Red herrings abound, but it soon becomes apparent that more than one person had a reason to want Carpenter dead….

    Fatality in Fleet Street displays the author’s trademark wit and a plot with plenty of twists and ingenuity to please the reader. Equally interesting are the political overtones and the militaristic pretensions of the deceased newspaper baron. The novel is set in 1938 – five years later than its real publication date – and presents a Russia whose economy is growing, which makes the country ‘a real menace to the established order of things’ in Carpenter’s worldview. Although the imperious newspaper baron meets his demise early on, his outsized personality and ambition are the bedrock that propels the story. Sprigg makes his satire clear; there is more than a passing resemblance between the fictional Lord Carpenter and the real world Max Aitken, Lord Beaverbrook, owner of the Evening Standard and Daily Express.

    Sprigg started his career as a cub reporter and the book’s setting of a busy newspaper is well realised. Fatality also takes a sardonic view of socialist activity in Britain. When Venables goes to investigate a local chapter of the Communist Party, the situation is alternately threatening and farcical, with members parading their revolutionary credentials and loudly denouncing the ‘bourgeois’. Sprigg later became an active member of the Communist Party and published Marxist literary criticism, but his gently mocking tone in Fatality suggests this conversion was some way off in 1933.



    Table of Contents
    Introduction 1: A Prime Minister Threatens 2: A Reporter Protests 3: A Magnate is Murdered 4: A Pathologist is Uneasy 5: Newspaper Cuttings Behave Oddly 6: The Editor Regrets 7: A Chinaman is Helpful 8: Russians are Mysterious 9: A Secretary is Frank 10: A Detective is Arrested 11: A News Editor is Suspicious 12: A Deputy Commissioner is Astonished 13: A Young Lady is in Love 14: The Accused is Unhelpful 15: A Landlady is Helpful 16: A Trial Begins 17: An Editor Struggles 18: A Court is Electrified 19: A Wife Betrays 20: A Judge is Angry 21: A Truth is Revealed

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