Updating Basket....

Sign In
0 Items

BASKET SUMMARY

There are currently no items added to the basket
Sign In
0 Items

BASKET SUMMARY

There are currently no items added to the basket

Sidney Chambers and The Forgiveness of Sins

Grantchester Mysteries 4

Sidney Chambers and The Forgiveness of Sins

Grantchester Mysteries 4

This item is in stock and will be dispatched within 48 hours.

1 unit left in stock.

Paperback / softback

£8.99

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN: 9781408862278
Number of Pages: 416
Published: 07/04/2016
Width: 12.9 cm
Height: 19.8 cm
'Delightful ... The ongoing plots bind the stories, yet each in themselves is precise ... They are a joy' - Stuart Kelly, Scotland on Sunday 'All manner of nostalgic delights. Perfect reading for a sunny English garden' - Kate Saunders, Independent 'The author knows the location well and has caught its dour charm and great art treasures to perfection' - Country Life _______________ Loveable full-time priest and part-time detective Canon Sidney Chambers is back, continuing his investigations. A mysterious stranger seeks sanctuary in Grantchester's church; a shooting weekend in the country has a sinister end; a friend receives poison pen letters; a piano falls on a musician's head; a school cricket match has an explosive finish; and on a holiday in Italy, Sidney is accused of stealing a priceless painting. On the home front, his new curate has become irritatingly popular with the parish and his daughter is starting to walk and talk.

James Runcie

James Runcie is an award-winning film-maker and the author of seven novels. Sidney Chambers and The Shadow of Death, the first in 'The Grantchester Mysteries' series, was published in 2012, soon followed by Sidney Chambers and The Perils of the Night, and Sidney Chambers and The Problem of Evil. In October 2014, ITV launched Grantchester, a prime-time, six-part series starring James Norton as Sidney Chambers. James Runcie lives in London and Edinburgh. www.jamesruncie.com www.grantchestermysteries.com @james_runcie

The fourth of James Runcie's delightful Grantchester Mysteries, which ought to bring about a critical reappraisal of the genre rather dismissively referred to as "cosy crime" ... The ongoing plots bind the stories, yet each in themselves is precise ... They are a joy -- Stuart Kelly * Scotland on Sunday * All manner of nostalgic delights. Perfect reading for a sunny English garden * Kate Saunders, Independent * The author knows the location well and has caught its dour charm and great art treasures to perfection. The story is a little art lesson in itself * Country Life * The violence in the Chambers stories takes place off-stage; the moral crises are internal. Perhaps the most startling aspect of these low-key, beguiling tales is their matter-of-fact depiction of a person of faith incorporating spiritual aspiration into daily life * Wall Street Journal *
Feefo logo