Acceptable Loss
Books | Fiction / Mystery & Detective / Historical
Anne Perry
Anne Perry’s seventeenth William Monk novel, now in paperback, is a mesmerizing masterpiece of innocence and evil on London’s docks, a welcome addition to this successful and beloved series. NATIONAL BESTSELLER On a London riverbank, when the body of small-time crook Mickey Parfitt washes up with the tide, no one grieves. But William Monk, commander of the River Police, is puzzled by the murder weapon: an elegant scarf whose original owner was obviously a man of substance. Dockside informers lead Monk to a floating palace of corruption on the Thames managed by Parfitt, where a band of half-starved boys is held captive for men willing to pay a high price for midnight pleasures. Though Monk and his fearless wife, Hester, would gladly reward Parfitt’s killer, duty leads them in another direction—to an unresolved crime, to a deadly confrontation with some of the empire’s most respected men, and ultimately to a courtroom showdown with Monk’s old friend, Oliver Rathbone, in a trial of nearly unbearable tension and suspense. “Masterful storytelling . . . [the] best in the series to date.”—The Star-Ledger
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More Details:
Author
Anne Perry
Pages
336
Publisher
Random House Publishing Group
Published Date
2012-08-21
ISBN
0345510615 9780345510617
Community ReviewsSee all
"This book was a continuation of the last one. Monk is still trying to end the prostitution of young boys on the river. From the last book, the main suspect is Margaret's father.<br/><br/>This book moved much faster than the last. We spent more time than usual with Rathbone, as he works to defend his father-in-law. <br/><br/>At the end, we get closure on many things, some that were left open from the last installment. The final page was a bit of a shocker, answering the final question of where the blackmail pictures are and who has possession of them. I hope the next book will let us know what decisions are made about them.<br/><br/>It always takes me a couple chapters to get into the Monk books, due to the old-style language and manners of the characters. But once I'm in, I'm in. It's fitting that Monk now works the river, because these books are like the tide. Once it has hold of you, you can't break free until you reach the end."