The women of Baker Street / Michelle Birkby.

By: Birkby, Michelle [author]Material type: TextTextSeries: Birkby, Michelle. Mrs Hudson and Mary Watson ; bk. 2.Publisher: Leicester [England] : Thorpe, Charnwood, 2019Edition: Large print editionDescription: 352 pages (large print) ; 24 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781444839562; 144483956XSubject(s): Women private investigators -- England -- London -- Fiction | Women -- Crimes against -- Fiction | London (England) -- History -- 1800-1950 -- FictionGenre/Form: Detective and mystery fiction. | Large type books. Summary: 1889: Mrs Hudson, long-suffering landlady of 221b Baker Street, falls ill and collapses in her home, and is whisked off by Dr Watson to St Bartholomew's Hospital. Perhaps she has developed an overactive imagination thanks to her eccentric lodgers, but it seems she is surrounded by patients who all have skeletons in their closets - on a ward with an unusually high mortality rate. And was the quiet murder she believed she witnessed on her first night simply a hallucination through a haze of morphine, or something more sinister? Meanwhile, Dr Watson's wife Mary has another case in hand. Young boys have been disappearing unnoticed from London's streets for years, and the Baker Street Irregulars whisper morbid rumours of their fates...
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
wnor- Book Northam
Northam Large Print
F BIR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Checked out 29/05/2024 31111077405346

1889: Mrs Hudson, long-suffering landlady of 221b Baker Street, falls ill and collapses in her home, and is whisked off by Dr Watson to St Bartholomew's Hospital. Perhaps she has developed an overactive imagination thanks to her eccentric lodgers, but it seems she is surrounded by patients who all have skeletons in their closets - on a ward with an unusually high mortality rate. And was the quiet murder she believed she witnessed on her first night simply a hallucination through a haze of morphine, or something more sinister? Meanwhile, Dr Watson's wife Mary has another case in hand. Young boys have been disappearing unnoticed from London's streets for years, and the Baker Street Irregulars whisper morbid rumours of their fates...

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.