Keith Havard
A perfect crime, but only revealed in the last few chapters. The story itself is slow and tedious, very hard work for someone like myself to engage in as I'm much more at home reading crime stories with fast flowing action throughout. It was only that my wife had bought this book on Google Play that I managed to stay the course. Many times during the read I was tempted to abandon this, but amazingly I finished it - Now I'm going to find something much more suitable for me to read!
Alison Robinson
Poor old Inspector Alan Grant, in the last book he was hospitalised after a nasty fall and now he's on sick leave because of his nerves/overwork which has given him claustrophobia. He is on his way to the Highlands of Scotland to stay with a cousin and her family on the night train, but as he makes to depart the train, he comes across the train guard trying to wake a passenger who is clearly dead.What follows is an engaging piece of detection, although not in the same class as Daughter of Time.
Louise Ricketts
Inspector Grant suffering from burnout goes to Scotland for the fishing but the discovery of a dead man on the train leads him on an investigation which helps him to heal. Josephine Tey at her best.