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A Broken Vessel

A Broken Vessel

List Price: $6.99
Your Price: $6.29
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A good read, though not as good as the first
Review: I liked the book well enough, although I do agree with those reviewers who say that the relationship between Kestrel and Sally felt contrived at best. Also at the end she was disposed off rather conveniently a la James Bond, presumably so that Mr. Kestrel can find another love interest in forthcoming books.

That said, it is rather interesting book and a good read.

I will be reading other books by Ms. Ross with interest.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: I like it
Review: It's been a year or so since I read this, but I remember rather enjoying the interaction between the 3 main characters. If you like historical fiction/mysteries I don't think this will be a disappointment.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: I like it
Review: It's been a year or so since I read this, but I remember rather enjoying the interaction between the 3 main characters. If you like historical fiction/mysteries I don't think this will be a disappointment.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not as good as the first
Review: Julian Kestrel is still an interesting character, but I found the plot here stretched my credulity to the breaking point. If the murder victim was so stupid as to act as she did, she was asking for it! And the "romance" between JK and the "hooker with the heart of gold" was a credulity strainer too.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: O.K. Addition to the series
Review: The plot is a bit strained and the relationship between the main character and the prostitute seems a little contrived, but overall an acceptable period mystery.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A fine mystery (and a bit of romance too)
Review: This was a very well-written, suspenseful mystery. Julian Kestrel is a dapper detective and this time he gets a lady friend. I enjoyed the story, with its social commentary, the villains and the historical detail. I also love the richness of the slang that ROss includes. I can't wait to read the other books in the series.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A fine mystery (and a bit of romance too)
Review: This was a very well-written, suspenseful mystery. Julian Kestrel is a dapper detective and this time he gets a lady friend. I enjoyed the story, with its social commentary, the villains and the historical detail. I also love the richness of the slang that ROss includes. I can't wait to read the other books in the series.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Top-notch!
Review: When Dr. MacGregor, a carry-over from Julian Kestrel's first adventure, CUT TO THE QUICK, asks the young London dandy, "Look here: are you going to fret yourself into a fever about this business, burn your fingers meddling in what's not your concern, and get yourself and everybody around you into a parcel of trouble?" what could the appropriate answer be, but 'Those were more or less my plans." The dryly-spoken words make one want to laugh out loud, regardless of one's surroundings or company.

These lines are found on page 79 of A BROKEN VESSEL, by which time Julian is well and truly caught, and not just by the mystery into which he has been thrust; the Cockney 'game gal' who opened the puzzle is the sister of Julian's valet, Dipper. Even though he hasn't seen his sister Sally in over two years, the relationship picks up with no hindrance. Not so that of Sally and Kestrel. Drawn to her in spite of himself, he withdraws, not wishing to upset Dipper. As he withdraws, Sally becomes ever more determined to discover whether her "Lightning', as she calls Kestrel, has any flesh and blood beneath his elegant exterior.

Sally always indulges herself in two seemingly harmless habits with any cove who engages her; she attaches a name, and she steals some small item, while the cove is otherwise occupied. During one memorable night, she consorts with "Bristles', "Blue-Eyes' and "Blinkers"; a handkerchief is the 'prize' she draws from each of them. Only later does she discover a letter that had been wrapped in one of the cloths. The problem is, which one? It is while she is recovering from the beating administered by Blinkers that she discovers both her brother and the letter. Dipper senses a need to involve his master, because the letter was obviously written by a rather distraught lady of rank, who is being kept against her will in an unnamed place. Who and where and why engage the attentions of this unlikely trio of detectives.

In an entirely logical progression of clues and identifications, Ms. Ross spins well her web, entangling us as certainly as Kestrel is entangled by Sally. Without modern criminology techniques available, Kestrel identifies the various players, including the anonymous lady, and the involved practices of the underworld which put her in a Reclamation Home for Fallen Women.

The pathway includes trips to the stews of London as well as a short jaunt to Wiltshire to return an eleven-year-old girl to her parents. The girl under the guise of being trained as a dressmaker's assistant, has instead been allowed to go to London as a potential child prostitute. Her path crosses that of Kestrel, who utilizes her coherent story to bring down one such purveyor of these goods.

During his absence from London, Sally becomes impatient, and decides to take things into her own hands, involving all three of the men from who she stole the handkerchiefs in a purported blackmail scheme. Kestrel and Dipper return, but not in time to save the life of a woman who has been haunting one of the three men, and who turns out to be the Scottish wife of Blue-Eyes. Bristles and 'Blinkers share another secret, one which neatly ties up all the loose ends in a satisfying trial before the magistrate, Sir Richard Birnie.

As before, the sights and sounds of 1824 London are brought to vivid life by the perfect usage of the language of the time. Kestrel, MacGregor, Dipper and Sally will surely be back. The next great mystery is "When, please?"


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