Cabaret Macabre

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Book 3 of A Joseph Spector Locked-Room Mystery
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Pub Date Jul 16 2024 | Archive Date Jun 30 2024
Penzler Publishers | Mysterious Press

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Description

Victor Silvius has spent nine years as an inmate at The Grange, a private sanatorium, for the crime of attacking judge Sir Giles Drury. Now, the judge’s wife, Lady Elspeth Drury, believes that Silvius is the one responsible for a series of threatening letters her husband has recently received. Eager to avoid the scandal that involving the local police would entail, Lady Elspeth seeks out retired stage magician Joseph Spector, whose discreet involvement in a case Sir Giles recently presided over greatly impressed her.

Meanwhile, Miss Caroline Silvius is disturbed after a recent visit to her brother Victor, convinced that he isn’t safe at The Grange. Someone is trying to kill him and she suspects the judge, who has already made Silvius’ life a living hell, may be behind it. Caroline hires Inspector George Flint of Scotland Yard to investigate.

The two cases collide at Marchbanks, the Drury family seat of over four hundred years, where a series of unnerving events interrupt the peace and quiet of the snowy countryside. A body is discovered in the middle of a frozen pond without any means of getting there and a rifle is fired through a closed window, killing a man but not breaking the glass. Only Spector and his mastery of the art of misdirection can uncover the logical explanations for these impossible crimes.

An atmospheric and puzzling traditional mystery that pays homage to the greatest writers of the genre’s Golden Age, Cabaret Macabre is the third book in Tom Mead’s Joseph Spector series, hailed by the Wall Street Journal as “a recipe for pure nostalgic pleasure.” The books can be enjoyed in any order.

Victor Silvius has spent nine years as an inmate at The Grange, a private sanatorium, for the crime of attacking judge Sir Giles Drury. Now, the judge’s wife, Lady Elspeth Drury, believes that...


Advance Praise

"Golden Age with an edge: Tom Mead’s books are perfect for those who love a classic crime puzzle with some elegant humor thrown in." - CWA Dagger winner S.G. MacLean

"Cabaret Macabre proves, once again, that Tom Mead is in a league of his own. This book is terrific—utterly original and so fun. I can't recommend it enough." - T.A. Willberg, author of Marion Lane and the Midnight Murder

"A big house, a grisly discovery, a dangerous family . . . and a daisy chain of murders linked by a fiendish plot. If you love a locked room mystery, Tom Mead is your man. He pulls out ingenious solutions like rabbits out of a hat. The clues are there, but I dare you to puzzle out how it was done." - S.J. Bennett, author of The Windsor Knot and Murder Most Royal

"Golden Age with an edge: Tom Mead’s books are perfect for those who love a classic crime puzzle with some elegant humor thrown in." - CWA Dagger winner S.G. MacLean

"Cabaret Macabre proves, once...


Available Editions

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ISBN 9781613165300
PRICE $26.95 (USD)

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Featured Reviews

Magician-turned-sleuth Joseph Spector is back when he is approached by Lady Elspeth Drury to come to her estate to investigate a poison pen letter threatening the life of her husband, renowned judge Sir Giles Drury. Meanwhile, Scotland Yard Inspector George Flint is engaged by Caroline Silvius to investigate freeing her brother Victor from an asylum where that same judge sentenced him nine years ago after he attacked the judge. Both cases intersect at the Drury's manor where murders occur, leading to a web of intrigue and further death before the case is solved.
This entry in the series features two locked door murders of a sort, one conventional and one seemingly impossible killing that in its own way is of the locked door variety. The book had more deaths, more mysteries, more suspects and more ingenious methods of killing than the previous ones in the series, definitely succeeding in the one-up factor. As the stakes grew higher and the body count rose, the intensity in the book never let up. While I did correctly guess the conventional locked door killer and roughly how it was enacted, as well as picked up on a few fairly obvious clues as to culprits of some of the crimes in the story, there was so much going on that I in no way could have guessed it all. This series just keeps getting better, though it will be hard to top all that went on in this edition.

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