Dec. 5th, 2012

The Blurb On The Back:

London, 1811

The twisting streets of riverside Wapping hold many an untold sin. Bounded by the ancient Ratcliffe Highway and the modern wonder of the London Dock, shameful secrets are largely hidden by the noise and glory of trade. But now two families have fallen victim to foul murder and John Harriott, magistrate of the Thames River Police Office, must deliver revenge up to a terrified populace. His only hope is his senior officer, Charles Horton. Harriott only recently came up with a word to describe what it is that Horton does. It is detection.

Plymouth, 1564

Billy Ablass arrives from Oxford with the burning desire of all young men: the getting and keeping of money. Captain John Hawkyns is about to set sail in a shop owned by Queen Elizabeth herself, and Billy sees the promise of a better life with a crew intent on gain and glory. But the kidnap of hundreds of human souls in Africa is not the only cursed event to occur on England’s first official slaving voyage. On a sun-blasted Florida islet, Billy, too, is to be enslaved for the rest of his accursed days.

Based on the real-life story of the gruesome Ratcliffe Highway murders, The English Monster takes us on a voyage across centuries, through the Age of Discovery, and throws us up, part of the human jetsam, onto the streets of Regency Wapping, policed only by Officer Horton. Brilliantly imagined and richly described, this eagerly awaited debut marks the arrival of a major new voice.


The Review (Cut For Spoilers): )

The Verdict:

Lloyd Shepherd’s debut novel mashes up historical crime fiction with dark fantasy to mixed effect. Based on a real series of murders on the Ratcliffe Highway and a real slaving voyage, the research is impressive but for me the two storylines didn’t converge as effectively as they could have done and the Ablass storyline lacked tension and revolved around a bland character. However, the opening chapters are gripping and I liked the period detail. Although I didn’t think that Shepherd maintained the strands, I’d be interested in reading Shepherd’s further work.

THE ENGLISH MONSTER was released in the UK on 1st March 2012. Thanks to Simon & Schuster for the free copy of this book.

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