The past is an inescapable noose around a young man's neck, in this
blackly comic, satirical novel from renowned crime writer Bill James
Britain, 1956. A young actress seemingly tries to commit suicide over a
tangled love affair, but is taken to hospital and her life saved. The
story is just the sort of thing that journalist Ian Charteris likes to
cover: a poignant mix of near tragedy, possible thwarted romance, and
glamour, needing sensitive but - of course - dramatic treatment. It
should be a routine assignment, a welcome assignment. It would be, if it
wasn't for the identity of the young woman. She may - just may - be
Ian's sister.
The unwelcome reminder of the past drags Ian back into memories of
places and events he'd rather forget. As far as Ian is concerned, the
past is a foreign country. And not just foreign. Fundamentally and
cantankerously hostile. Vengeful, war-torn, dangerous.
It is impossible to escape the past; the noose is already around Ian's
neck, and every step he takes it tightens . . . And this is not the only
noose.