A corpse in a corset. A dangerous gambling den. A perilous path between safety and evil.London, 1905. Leading milliner Emily Gates’ illegal shortcut through a private park in the rain brought her straight to a scantily clothed corpse. Then her route took her straight into the hands of the indefatigable Lady Kaldaire, who recognized the body as a relative of her longtime friend, the Duchess of … Duchess of Wallingford. Lady Kaldaire blackmailed Emily before to find Lord Kaldaire’s killer. Why not this murderer, too?
Emily has plenty of reasons why not, but finding links between her father’s nefarious family of crooks and conmen and the debauchery of the secretive Marlowe Club involves her in the investigation led by the handsome Inspector Russell of Scotland Yard. Emily discovers more than she expects about the licentious world of the corpse through her aristocratic customers, including Georgia, heroine of the Victorian Bookshop Mysteries, now the Duchess of Blackford.
Are the scandal rags correct, or has the victim been maligned by a mastermind who’ll stop at nothing to gain everything?
This is a historical cozy mystery with no graphic violence, sex, or foul language. Just exciting action, mysterious events, and surprising endings.
more
MURDER AT THE MARLOWE CLUB by Kate Parker
The Second Milliner Mystery
Taking a shortcut through a private park, milliner Emily Gates discovers the dead body of a woman. Lady Kaldaire soon joins the scene and recognizes the woman as the notorious Lady Roxanne, wife of the equally reprobate Lord Theodore who died mere weeks before. Although Emily just wants to return to her business and make more hats, Lady Kaldaire has other ideas. The murdered woman was the daughter-in-law of her good friend and Lady Kaldaire is determined to make Emily help her solve the murder. With Lady Kaldaire threatening to tell all of Emily’s clients that her family is comprised of criminals, thereby ruining her, Emily reluctantly complies. Will Emily’s new friends be able to help her survive the debauchery found at the Marlowe Club? Or will she encounter something even more sinister?
MURDER AT THE MARLOWE CLUB has more twists and turns than rosettes on one of Emily’s millinery creations! The perceptions of various characters colored everything and I love how the truth was slowly revealed. The book proves a good reminder not to believe everything you hear!
Emily Gates makes a wonderful protagonist. She’s loyal, smart, and truly doesn’t want to get involved in another murder. Emily is also well able to take care of herself, as we see in a few scenes! Her criminally inclined family provide a great counterpoint to the aristocracy, with Emily caught in the middle. We also meet some great new characters in this second Milliner Mystery. The Duke and Duchess of Blackford are actually characters from the Victorian Book Shop Mysteries, another series written by Kate Parker. While readers familiar with that series will enjoy seeing these characters again, previous knowledge of them is totally unnecessary as they are unfamiliar to Emily as well and we learn about them as she does.
MURDER AT THE MARLOWE CLUB is an exciting twisty ride through the seamier side of Edwardian London at a time when cocaine was still legal and private clubs held all manner of secrets.
FTC Disclosure – The publisher sent me an e-copy of this book in the hopes I would review it.
I absolutely love reading cozy mystery books set in the time period in which Murder at the Marlowe Club takes place. I was very excited to read this book because of the synopsis. Plus, it is only the second book in the series which meant I wasn’t too far behind. This can easily be read as a stand alone though there are definitely hints about what happened in book one, so start with that one if you don’t like spoilers.
Murder at the Marlowe Club starts out strong and just keeps going. I love that Emily, the main character, owns a millinery shop because the author describes the hats (as well as the fashion) in a lot of detail. Emily comes from a sketchy family. And, in the story, we find out that Lady Kaldaire uses that fact to “blackmail” Emily into helping her solve the murders. She’s the only one in “proper” circles who knows about Emily’s family. Emily, thinking her shop will fail if people find out about her family, agrees to help Lady Kaldaire.
I know what you’re thinking…this Lady Kaldaire must not be a very nice person. Au contraire. I think she just likes solving crimes, and she doesn’t want to do it alone! Even though Emily’s family may be criminals, they’re a very tight knit family who love each other and love Emily. They also come in handy when things get hairy, or when Emily needs certain information that she knows they’ll have. If you know anything about London during this time period, you can’t really blame her family for their activities.
Speaking of the time period, you can definitely tell that the author knows what she’s talking about. You can see in her bio that she grew up reading her father’s history books. This knowledge really brings life to the book. It’s the little details about fashion, society, debauchery, locations, etc. that make this feel like you’re reading a factual account rather than a fictional cozy mystery book.
Though this is a clean cozy mystery (and it really is), someone in the story discusses what two characters do to another character at the Marlowe Club. Though no specific details are given, that discussion is on the PG13 side. It completely fits the story, and it’s not used for shock value. It’s used so we can see the complete immorality and evil intentions those characters have.
I highly recommend Murder at the Marlowe Club for you historical cozy mystery lovers. I’ll be going back to read the first book, The Killing at Kaldaire House, soon, and I can’t wait for the next book in this series.