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'Some wrong was done long ago. It can never be righted, and it has not been forgotten. Someone remembers it.' London, 1894. Inspector Henry Cutter is in an unconvivial temper. Then the murders begin. The first to die is Sir Aneurin Considine, a decorated but long-retired civil servant, is found dead amongst his beloved orchid collection, killed by a wound inflicted with surgical precision. Soon, other victims suffer similar fates. More men in powerful positions; more murders that are gruesome but immaculately orchestrated. The perpetrator comes and goes like a ghost, leaving only carefully considered traces. Hot on the tails of this invisible adversary are Inspector Cutter, along with his hapless but endlessly enthusiastic sidekick, Sergeant Gideon Bliss. But as the pressure mounts, victims will start to look like perpetrators, murderers like truth-tellers, long-hidden failings will come resurface, and not even their very selves are safe from suspicion.
Hugely entertaining, spine-chilling, witty and warm, The Naming of the Birds is a 19th century who-dunnit, a Gothic tale of revenge and betrayal, and a richly imagined historical novel, from the author of The House on Vesper Sands.
Gideon is in love with a ghost. He must find her killers before she disappears completely.
'Lavishly entertaining' Independent'Enthralling . . . a literary feast' Stylist'A vividly imagined and deeply pleasurable gothic fantasy' Financial Times'O'Donnell is clearly a major talent' Guardian
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