A Death at the Dionysus Club

by Melissa Scott, Amy Griswold (Author)

The Julian Lynes & Ned Mathey Mysteries (2)

On This Page

Description

In the sequel to Lambda Literary Award-winning Death by Silver, metaphysician Ned Mathey and private detective Julian Lynes again challenge magical and murderous threats in a Victorian London not quite the city in our history books. Mathey is recruited by Scotland Yard to assist the new Metaphysical Crimes Squad in the case of a literally heartless corpse. Mathey soon discovers that the magic used to rob the man of his heart and life does not conform to the laws of modern metaphysics-and show more then a second victim turns up. Meanwhile, a minor poet hires Lynes to track down and stop the blackmailer threatening to reveal him as the pseudonymous author of popular romances. When another target of the same blackmailer, a friend of Mathey's assistant Miss Frost, appeals for aid, Lynes and Mathey begin to suspect murders and blackmail are connected. Digging deep into the clandestine worlds of lawless antique magic and the gay demimonde, Mathey and Lynes must uncover the source and nature of a heart-stealing supernatural creature before it can kill them too, even as they face the scandal of exposing themselves as sodomites in order to close the case. show less

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

6 reviews
I think I love this book even more than Death by Silver.

Same quality writing (still, there are a few pesky typos, but who cares, they are just that - typos), with amazing characters. Take Dolly Hall, for example. He dies in the very beginning of the book, but his presence is palpable all the way through the end. Challice, the poor soul. Stuck in a straight marriage, thinking himself an abomination at the same time longing for family and kids. There is not much of him in this story, either, but I couldn't help worrying about him and his wife.
Magic. Spells. Curses. Sex magic. Forbidden magic. Evil creatures. Half House. No, literally, Half House :) Yeah... pretty cool!
London. I was attached to both my ipad and my phone, following the show more streets on Google Maps and checking out the landmarks while reading. I only visited all the usual tourist traps for the most part when I was there, but it made it easier for me to orient myself. London is one of the most spectacular cities I've ever seen (step aside, Paris!) and one of my favorites.
Evil sorcerer. Well, not quite a sorcerer, but he used some pretty weird messed up magic. This time he was much harder to pin. In Death by Silver the murderer was very predictable and it caused me a lot of frustration. Every time the said criminal was on page, I couldn't help but yell at the boys: Right there! See? How can you be so blind! Figure it out already!
I could not put the book down and didn't want it to end. If you love KJ Charles, you will like this, too.
The MCs are under much pressure where their affection for each other is concerned (those were the times *sign*), so don't expect prolonged or explicit sex scenes. But the tenderness is there.

Very much recommended.
show less
I simply loved this one. The story itself was thrilling, with nail-biting moments (that desperate run through the fog!) and so filled with mostly despicable victims that you need to remind yourself that, no, eating human parts it's not the adequated way of dealing with things.

The relationship between Julian and Ned is... complicated. There are so many unsaid things, and so much in their past that it's affecting their present. And the times don't help, either. But, somehow, they make it work and manage to trust each other not only with their bodies (that was the easy part) but with their heart too.

But what I truly enjoyed here is how some secondary characters are taking a more definite shape. Miss Frost is sharp as a whip, resourceful, show more strong-willed and firmly set in her own goals, and I love her... and her friend, Miss Barton? Well, as she's going to work with Hatton as police matron I think we'll see more of her.

And talking of Hatton... I like him, too. He is down-to-earth, sensible and intelligent, his work his motivating force. A truly decent man, in the real sense of the word.

Even Oppenshaw is likeable: stern but curious, severe but compassionate. Yeah, I like him.

So, yes, this certainly made to my favourites list =D
show less
Another solid mystery in a magical alt-victorian world. Ned and Julian's romance continues to deepen, and their magical and detection partnership as well. Great read!
What's harder to solve than a locked room murder? A case where the victims' hearts are removed without leaving a mark on the body. And how does it tie in with the blackmail of ladies romance fiction writers? Another metaphysical case for Ned Mathey and Julian Lynes.

Members

Recently Added By

Lists

Best Fantasy Novels
821 works; 357 members
Gaslamp Fantasy
87 works; 15 members
Female Author
1,235 works; 67 members
LGBTQ+ Speculative Fiction
818 works; 51 members
Speculative Fiction to Read
706 works; 31 members

Author Information

Picture of author.
66+ Works 7,499 Members
Melissa Scott is a science fiction writer. She was born in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1961. Scott studied history at Harvard University before earning her Ph. D. in comparative history from Brandeis University. Scott's first science fiction book, The Game Beyond, was published in 1984. In 1986, she won the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer. show more Scott received the Lambda Literary Award for Gay/Lesbian Science Fiction in both 1995 and 1996 for the books Trouble and Her Friends and Shadow Man. She is a co-founder of WaveLengths, a journal of gay/lesbian/bisexual-interest science fiction and fantasy. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Picture of author.
Author
10+ Works 611 Members

Awards and Honors

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
A Death at the Dionysus Club
Original publication date
2014
People/Characters
Julian Lynes; Ned Mathey; Cordelia Frost
First words
CHAPTER ONE: An Incident at the Mercury Club

Julian Lynes leaned back to allow the waiter to clear away the remains of what he had to admit had been a better-than-expected dinner.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"I feel capable of dealing with that," Julian said austerely, and Ned grinned, reaching for his hat. Julian waited while he dimmed the lights and locked the chamber door behind them, and they went down the stairs in perfect amity.
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, LGBTQ+, Fantasy, Mystery, Romance, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3569 .C672 .D37Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-

Statistics

Members
101
Popularity
318,300
Reviews
4
Rating
½ (4.36)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
4
ASINs
4