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Edward Kane and the Parlour Maid Murderer

«

"Colourful and exciting…Victorian Edinburgh comes to life…"

»

Alexander Mccall Smith

Scotland, 1850. The penalty for murder is death by hanging. Why then employ a young



defence lawyer with no trial experience who is surely destined to fail? And why does his



client refuse to tell him what happened on the night the crime took place? "Edward Kane



and the Parlour Maid Murderer" follows the young Advocate, Edward Kane, and his



manservant, Mr Horse from the great houses of Edinburgh to the taverns and alleyways of



the Old Town in search of answers - and defence. Les mer

167,-
Paperback
Utsolgt
Scotland, 1850. The penalty for murder is death by hanging. Why then employ a young



defence lawyer with no trial experience who is surely destined to fail? And why does his



client refuse to tell him what happened on the night the crime took place? "Edward Kane



and the Parlour Maid Murderer" follows the young Advocate, Edward Kane, and his



manservant, Mr Horse from the great houses of Edinburgh to the taverns and alleyways of



the Old Town in search of answers - and defence. Written by Ross Macfarlane QC ("Noted



legal expert" - Legal 500), the novel evokes the sights and sounds of Victorian Scotland,



introducing a rich cast of characters.

Detaljer

Forlag
Scotland Street Press
Innbinding
Paperback
Språk
Engelsk
Sider
344
ISBN
9781910895498
Utgivelsesår
2021
Format
23 x 16 cm

Anmeldelser

«

"Colourful and exciting…Victorian Edinburgh comes to life…"

»

Alexander Mccall Smith

«

‘Transport yourself back to 19th Century Edinburgh for a truly gripping read... Fabulous...in the tradition of Robert Louis Stevenson’  

»

The Scotsman

«Lawfully proceeding into the past as QC turns novelist to unveil Victorian whodunnit

The telling of stories is part of everyday life for Ross Macfarlane as the leading lawyer persuasively argues his case in front of a jury or judge.

Now he has used his flair for compelling narrative – along with a fascination for Victorian Edinburgh – to write a Christmas murder mystery featuring advocate sleuth, Edward Kane, and his manservant. “The idea for Edward Kane came to me as I was standing in the graveyard at Canongate Kirk in Edinburgh,” said Mr Macfarlane.

“It came to me that 19th Century Edinburgh would be a great location for exciting mystery stories with Calton Jail, where they held public executions, the High Court, and the different strata of society.”

Edward Kane And The Parlour Maid Murder is set in Edinburgh in 1850, when the penalty for murder is death by hanging. Kane and Horse’s search for the truth about the gruesome crime takes them from the great houses of the New Town to the seedy taverns and alleyways of the Old Town. Mr Macfarlane, a Supreme Courts Advocate, drew on his own experience in the criminal justice system to write his first novel. “Being in court is like being a writer – you have to keep your audience engaged. The more attractive the story, the better the result you get.

“Edward Kane is like any young person thrown into a crisis – he’s an advocate who has never been in a murder trial. I drew on my own experiences when I started out.”

When he started “devilling”, or training to be an advocate, Parliament Square and the Advocates’ Library, with its bewigged advocates and judges, felt like a far cry from his roots in the Gorbals, where he grew up in the 1960s. “I loved the theatricality of the law and the courts – the antique court dress of horsehair wig, white bow tie and black tailcoat. It was like falling asleep and waking up inside Tom Brown’s School Days.”

Today, Mr Macfarlane lives in Edinburgh’s New Town, but he’s never forgotten growing up in a tenement in the Gorbals, the son of a head chef and a waitress. “It’s only when you get older you realise those were pretty hard times,” he said. “I remember at primary school looking around me when I was seven or eight and, even at that age, I knew many of the kids were doomed to a life of poverty and crime.

 

“As I got older, I didn’t run with any gangs as I thought the whole macho culture was stupid. I would be approached periodically by boys and asked to join in some scheme or another, but their plans were hair-brained and doomed to failure, so I politely declined.

“I was happy sitting at home. I loved reading and collecting comic books. It struck me that if Superman wasn’t breaking the law, then why should I?

“A lot has a been written about how grim the Gorbals were in the 1950s and 1960s, which was then considered the most socially-deprived area in Europe, but you don’t see that as a child. It was a close-knit and caring community – ordinary folk helping their neighbours when they could in tenements that were ‘vertical villages’.”

He stood out at Holyrood Secondary for taking Latin and Greek, and for insisting on talking in the “BBC English” he heard on the radio. “I’ve always been aspirational. I loved Lord Snooty in The Beano and wanted to get a job where I could wear a top hat like him.”

His upbringing has proved useful in court, where he sometimes has to translate witness statements that baffle colleagues from more well-heeled backgrounds. “I have to explain the ‘cloack’ on the mantlepiece is not an opera cloak, and when a witness said there was a ‘chap at the door’ the other advocate asked what he looked like.”

 

Mr Macfarlane is not only involved with criminal cases – one of the most notable was when he unravelled a historic miscarriage of justice with the kind of forensic research used by the advocate hero of his murder mystery novel.

Thomas Muir of Huntershill was a pioneering 18th Century Scots advocate whose calls for political reform saw him struck off and sentenced to exile in an Australian penal colony. After 200 years, Mr Macfarlane successfully pled for Muir to be re-admitted to the roll of the Faculty of Advocates after his research led to the discovery of a court document that proved his expulsion was void.

Mr Macfarlane, who is also the founder and artistic director of the Faculty of Advocates choir, is now working on a sequel to his murder mystery, but how does he find time to write between court cases?

“I spend a lot of my time on trains getting to and from courts. I hate to waste time, so I thought I would try my hand at writing a novel on those daily train journeys. I had already written short stories that had been published and plays that had been produced, but never a full-length novel. So, every day, on the train, five days a week, I would sit and write for an hour.

“The majority of the characters just popped into my head with no pre-planning. It was as if they already existed and were trying to elbow their way into the book. Now they’re fighting to get into the sequel.”

»

Maggie Ritchie, The Sunday Post

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