Author does not allow the romance to dominate the story
Death in a White Tie is the seventh Alleyn novel |
Although
Alleyn and Troy’s romance makes progress during the novel, the focus of the
story is on Alleyn’s investigation into the murder of a popular member of the nobility,
who has been helping Scotland Yard to uncover the identity of a blackmailer who
has been preying on wealthy women.
Alleyn
feels responsible for Lord (Bunchy) Gospell’s death and vows to catch and
punish the killer himself because Bunchy, who is murdered in a taxi on his way
home from a ball, has been gathering information for the police.
Bunchy was
also a close friend of Troy’s, and therefore the detective and the painter find
themselves once again thrown together during a murder investigation.
Ngaio, who
was a native New Zealander, and spent some of her time living in England,
provides a vivid picture for the reader of the London season as it was during
the 1930s. She shows the debutantes and chaperones doing the rounds of the
cocktail parties, dinners, and balls, based on her own observations of society while
she was staying in London.
But the
hunt for Bunchy’s killer is kept centre stage during the novel and the police investigation
is interesting to follow. Alleyn has friends and relatives at many of the social
occasions featured in the story and so events can unfold naturally. In the
earlier novels, when Alleyn was an outsider called in to investigate in an
unknown environment, he had to conduct a series of interviews to establish the
facts.
Patrick Malahide and Belinda Lang played Alleyn and Troy in the TV adaptation |
Death in a
White Tie was adapted for television in 1993 when it was an episode in the BBC’s
Inspector Alleyn Mysteries series. The role of Alleyn was played by the actor
Patrick Malahyde.
I enjoyed
Death in a White Tie and thought it was even better than the previous six
novels in the series.
Buy Death in a White Tie from or
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