Introducing Poppy Denby, a young journalist in London during the
Roaring Twenties, investigating crime in the highest social circles
It is 1920. Twenty-two year old Poppy Denby moves from Northumberland to
live with her paraplegic aunt in London. Aunt Dot, a suffragette who was
injured in battles with the police in 1910, is a feisty and
well-connected lady.
Poppy has always dreamed of being a journalist, and quickly lands a
position as an editorial assistant at the Daily Globe. Then one of the
paper's hacks, Bert Isaacs, dies suddenly and messily. Poppy and
photographer Daniel Rokeby (with whom Poppy has an immediate and mutual
attraction) begin to wonder if Bert was pushed. His story was going to
be the morning lead, but he hasn't finished writing it. Poppy finds his
notes and completes the story, which is a sensation.
The Globe's editor, realising her valuable suffragette contacts, invites
her to dig deeper. Poppy starts sifting through the dead man's files and
unearths a major mystery which takes her to France--and abruptly into
danger.