
A Murderous Malady
A Florence Nightingale Mystery
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Narrated by:
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Lucy Rayner
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By:
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Christine Trent
About this listen
For fans of Charles Todd and Deanna Raybourn comes Christine Trent's second Florence Nightingale mystery.
Cholera has broken out in London, but Florence Nightingale has bigger problems when people begin dying of a far more intentional cause - murder.
The London summer of 1854 is drawing to a close when a deadly outbreak of cholera grips the city. Florence Nightingale is back on the scene marshaling her nurses to help treat countless suffering patients at Middlesex Hospital as the disease tears through the Soho slums. But beyond the dangers of the disease, something even more evil is seeping through the ailing streets of London.
It begins with an attack on the carriage of Florence's friend, Elizabeth Herbert, wife of Secretary at War Sidney Herbert. Elizabeth survives, but her coachman does not. Within hours, Sidney's valet stumbles into the hospital, mutters a few cryptic words about the attack, and promptly dies from cholera. Sidney, frantic that an assassin is stalking his wife, enlists Florence's help, who accepts but has little to go on except for the valet's last words and a curious set of dice in his jacket pocket. Soon, the suspects are piling up faster than cholera victims, as there seems to be no end to the number of people who bear a grudge against the Herbert household.
Now, Florence is in a race against time - not only to save the victims of a lethal disease but to foil a murderer with a disturbingly sinister goal.
©2019 Christine Trent (P)2019 Blackstone Audio, Inc.All that said, its free so give it a go,
ATB
kev
A good story - BUT
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I also found that by increasing the reading speed to 1.15 I was able to reduce the irritating "Knightsbridge Drawl" that I found so annoying whilst listening to the previous book.
But here's the big "But" - the story is set in the London of 1854, the high non-Fiction period; I know that books have to appeal to a trans-Atlantic audience but surely those who speak American English could cope with a story written in Anglo English? The use of words like "stoop" for step, "taxi" when the conveyance of the day was a hansom cab, or a wheeler, the word "vest" used for a waistcoat . . . It's not difficult, if I can translate the text one way surely our cousins overseas can do the reverse.
The last straw changed my teeth gritting to teeth grinding when the narrative referred to a baby's "diaper". Really? That was a step (or a stoop) too far!
Whilst the word was at one time used in the UK for a chequered cloth (which itself had originated in France), by the period of this story the British baby's bottom was covered with a napkin, or nappy; it was not covered by a diaper. The word "diaper" fell out of usage here, instead it travelled to the United States with those seeking fortune in the New World. In short, if a story is set in mid Victorian England, then the appropriate version of English should be good enough.
So Close to Very Good . . . . . But ....
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Historically interesting
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Good story
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Slight
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It’s a real shame however that the editors didn’t weed out the Americanisms, seeing as the books are based in Victorian England! In particular, the final chapters are full of mention of diapers and not nappies. It was very distracting and really grated in my ear.
A great series - shame about the Americanisms
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spoilt by constant "americanese"
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Reasonably good story
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Good story, but a couple of niggles
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Fantastic story until...
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