
AN ELLE BEST MYSTERY OF THE YEAR
"I was immediately besotted . . . Brilliant." -Janice Hallett, internationally bestselling author of The Appeal All is calm, all is bright . . . until reluctant sleuth barrister Gabriel Ward is tasked with finding the culprit of yet another grisly crime in the Inner Temple. Christmas Eve, 1901. Gabriel Ward KC is hard at work on a thorny libel case involving London's most famous music hall star, Topsy Tillotson, and its most notorious tabloid newspaper, the Nation's Voice, but the Inner Temple remains as quiet and calm as ever. Quiet, that is, until a severed hand arrives in the post. While the hand's recipient, Temple Treasurer Sir William Waring, is rightfully shaken, Gabriel is filled with curiosity. Who would want to send such a thing? And why? But as more parcels arrive-one with fatal consequences-Gabriel realizes that it is not Sir William who is the target, but the Temple itself. Someone is holding a grudge that has already led to at least one death. Now it's up to Gabriel, and Constable Wright of the City of London Police, to find out who, before an old death leads to a new murder."I enjoy this series because I find Gabriel Ward fascinating . . . While Smith provides brief hints about Gabriel's backstory, I hope we learn more in the books to come. What circumstances led Gabriel to become a man who lives most comfortably in his own sharp and febrile mind? Future installments of this charming series may tell us." --The California Review of Books
"There's something in Sally Smith's books-which are set in the elite world of London lawyers in the early 1900s-that brings to mind the classic mysteries of Dorothy L. Sayers or Sarah Cauldwell. They have clever plots with a bit of levity to them-and a bit of surprise that never becomes too gory." --ELLE, The Best Mysteries and Thrillers of the Year "Exciting . . . I loved Sir Gabriel as a detective . . . This novel is perfectly paced with lots of twists and turns and an intellectually satisfying denouement . . . I sincerely hope the author continues with this series." --The Historical Novel Society "Former barrister Smith injects her entertaining sequel to A Case of Mice and Murder with a jolt of wit and sweetness . . . Smith keeps things delightfully unpredictable . . . Elegant prose, expert pacing, and a well-drawn protagonist whose kindness and acuity never feel heavy-handed result in a thoroughly appealing yuletide mystery. This series deserves a long life." --Publishers Weekly, starred review "The pleasure of reading Smith, who is as deft, nuanced, and prepossessing a writer as Gabriel is a lawyer, is that she pulls readers fully into his world and his own sense of the unfolding of his cases. That focus deepens the atmosphere and extends the worldbuilding. It is a lovely writerly turn in books that are quickly becoming appointment reading." --Library Journal, starred review "The setting, the characters, the tone, and the methodical dispersal of clues to the sins the stuffy cast is hiding are well up to the high bar of Gabriel's debut in A Case of Mice and Murder (2025)." --Kirkus Reviews "I love Sally's writing, and now she's established herself as a masterful voice in the mystery world. As you'd expect from an ex-King's Counsel, her language is as rich as it is precise. In this book, I loved getting to know Gabriel better, and wondering how much has really changed in the upper echelons of the law. Topsy Tillotson is a heroine I thoroughly enjoyed rooting for, and the court scenes are a heart-in-mouth highlight. I'm a big fan of the series and I'm already looking forward to Gabriel's next adventure." --S.J. Bennett, author of THE WINDSOR KNOT "A delightful read, well-paced, and full of interesting details. There's something satisfying about a murder mystery well told . . . Hopefully, Sir Gabriel's career as a detective is just getting started." --The California Review of Books on A CASE OF MICE AND MURDER "Smith's novel is a quiet triumph. Each small unfolding supports the next, characters blossom off the page, and the pitch-perfect pacing is as pleasurable as the descriptive detail." --Library Journal, starred review on A CASE OF MICE AND MURDER