"Effortlessly atmospheric [with] a killer likely to take most
readers by surprise." -- Kirkus Reviews
Renowned for its authentic characters and settings based partly on the
author's own experiences of life in the Lune Valley, E. C. R. Lorac's
classic rural mystery returns to print for the first time since 1953.
This edition includes an introduction by award-winning author Martin
Edwards.
"I'm minded of the way a fire spreads in dry bracken when we burn it off
the fellside: tongues of flame this way and that--tis human tongues and
words that's creeping like flames in brushwood."
It all began up at High Gimmerdale with the sheep-stealing, a hateful
act in the shepherding fells above the bend in the Lune River--the Crook
o' Lune. Then came the fire at Aikengill house and with the leaping of
the flames, death, disorder, and dangerous gossip came to the quiet
moorlands.
Visiting his friends, the Hoggetts, while searching for some farmland to
buy up ahead of his retirement, Chief Inspector Robert Macdonald's trip
becomes a busman's holiday when he is drawn to investigate the deadly
blaze and the deep-rooted motives behind the rising spate of crimes.