Death Called to the Bar

by David Dickinson

Lord Francis Powerscourt (5)

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Queen's Inn is London's youngest and most fashionable Inn of Court. On 29th February 1902, at a Feast, senior barrister Alexander Dauntsey collapses into his soup and dies. He has been poisoned. Soon after his friend Woodford Stewart is shot dead, and Lord Francis Powerscourt is summoned to discreetly investigate the matter of the murdered barristers. His inquiries take him into the heart of legal London where the wills of the dead can reveal the crimes of the living. It takes him to the show more heart of a troubled marriage where lack of children imperils everything. And it takes him to Calne, a mysterious house in the country where the glorious past is boarded up and the treasures of generations hide beneath the dustsheets. There are many suspects: a jealous wife, a mistress fearful of being jilted, a work colleague beaten to the senior role in the Inn and a cuckolded husband who writes books about poisons. Powerscourt himself is put in grave danger before he finally solves the mystery of Death Called to the Bar. show less

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3 reviews
Good entry in this interesting series. We learn much about the English legal system and its famous inns as two of its "benchers" are murdered... As the lawyers perceive the police as generally incompetent, Lord Powerscourt is asked to investigate. Any obscuring layers must be removed by thorough and careful research before these crimes and others preceding them are resolved.
½
A step up from the disappointing previous story (Death of a Chancellor) but this is far from the first couple of novels in the series in terms of excitement. Instead we have a pretty straight-forward (dare I say dull?) murder plot - I was expecting a dramatic twist but actually it was all as obvious as it appeared - and some fairly turgid prose (My pet peeves of overuse of first names by characters in a two person conversation and too many overtly Christian references are again present). Johnny Fitzgerald, one of the more interesting characters in earlier novels, barely gets a look in and is reduced to bird-watching (yes, really) whilst Powerscourt solves the crime.

The author has clearly done his homework, his descriptions of the Inns show more of Court etc are fascinating, but his obvious passion for art threatens to take over the story - he even has the Powerscourts move to a house across the road from the Wallace Collection so he has an excuse to send his characters there at every available opportunity.

I'm going to give it a while before tackling the next in the series and I'm just hoping that the author finds his feet again before I give up entirely.
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This one seemed more insubstantial than usual. This slight mystery never really comes to the boil and in fact is still barely simmering through the eventual denouement, despite a late gun battle in a London gallery. It was till quite a pleasant read but a bit dull. There were too few episodes of whimsy in this one. Usually I quite like Powerscourt when he gets distracted by his beloved history. There are still a lot of the Dickinson staples like the 'young innocent couple' and the obsessive, caricatured cameos but this one just seemed to me to be going through the motions. Two misfires in a row usually mans an abandoned series for me but I suspect I'll come crawling back to number 8 Manchester Road sooner or later.
½

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Author Information

24 Works 1,119 Members
David Dickinson joined the BBC where he became editor of Newsnight and Panorama.

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Death Called to the Bar
People/Characters
Lord Francis Powerscourt; Lady Lucy Powerscourt; Johnny Fitzgerald; Alexander Dauntsey; Barton Somerville; Jack Beecham (show all 8); Sarah Henderson; Edward Hastings
Important places
London, England, UK; Calne, Wiltshire, England, UK
Dedication
For Gay and Charlie
First words
There was a tremendous crash right up against the wall.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Though much is taken, much abides; and though
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven; that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield."

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Mystery, Historical Fiction
DDC/MDS
823.92Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-2000-
LCC
PR6104 .I24 .D434Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature2001-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
79
Popularity
401,238
Reviews
3
Rating
½ (3.54)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
7
ASINs
2