Posted to Death by Dean James

By: Dean James

Vampire sleuth Simon Kirby-Jones moves to the idyllic English village of Snupperton Mumsley where the murder of the village postmistress launches his career as an amateur detective.

A Simon Kirby-Jones Mystery

Genre: Mystery Amateur Sleuth | Mystery

Kensington
March 24, 2003
Featuring: Simon Kirby-Jones; Giles Blitherington
288 pages
ISBN: 1575668866
Paperback (reprint)

Book Summary

He's Poirot without a pulse. Holmes without a heartbeat. England has found itself a new sleuth to call its own, but Simon Kirby-Jones is not only a vampire, he's an American to boot. He's pulled up stakes in the States to settle in the quaint English village of Snupperton Mumsley, where his southern charm will be put to work uncovering the deadly secrets of his new neighbors...

Luckily for Simon, a dandy new drug has made bloodsucking and sun damage passé. Which makes it possible for him to work himself into the daily life of Snupperton Mumsley. While attending a meeting of SMADS (the Snupperton Mumsley Amateur Dramatic Society), a fierce contretemps brews between Lady Prunella Blitherington, the pompous matriarch of the village's "first family" and Abigail Winterton, the mean-spirited postmistress, over which play to perform. A day later, Abigail is found strangled; her play—detailing the sordid lives of the residents of a small English village—nowhere to be found.

With his preternatural senses tuned for trouble, Simon makes his rounds among the village regulars, including Lady Blitherington's snooty son Giles; Trevor Chase, a charming bookseller with a dark secret; and Colonel Athelstan Clitheroe, who could easily have been plucked from the pages of an Agatha Christie novel. No one is above suspicion as Simon gathers enough dishy gossip to bring a blush to his unearthly pallor, while looking for the play and the person who brought the curtain down on its author's life...

Unceasingly charming and wonderfully witty, Posted to Death introduces a vampire whose bark is worse than his bite—and whose unique way of unlife makes him well-suited to delving into the mysteries of death.

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