
Daughters of Night: ´Once in a blue moon levels of fantastic´ - James O´Brien
Percival Everett
'The best historical crime novel I will read this year' – The Times
From The Sunday Times bestselling author of The Square of Sevens, Laura Shepherd-Robinson’s Daughters of Night follows Caroline Corsham as she seeks justice for a murdered woman whom Georgian London society would rather forget . . .
London, 1782. Desperate for her politician husband to return home from France, Caroline ‘Caro’ Corsham is already in a state of anxiety when she finds a well-dressed woman mortally wounded in Vauxhall Pleasure Gardens. The Bow Street constables are swift to act, until they discover that the dead woman was a highly paid prostitute. But Caro has motives of her own for wanting to see justice done.
Enlisting the help of thief-taker Peregrine Child, Caro sets out to solve the crime herself. Their inquiry delves into the hidden corners of Georgian society, a world of artifice and deception. But with many gentlemen refusing to speak about their dealings with the dead woman, and Caro’s own reputation under threat, finding the killer will be more treacherous than she can know . . .
'Spectacularly brilliant . . . One of the most enjoyable and enduring stories I have ever read' – James O'Brien, journalist and author of How They Broke Britain
Praise for Laura Shepherd-Robinson:
'This rich, complex and haunting Dickensian epic is a triumph of the Gothic genre' – Janice Hallett, bestselling author of The Appeal, on The Square of Sevens
‘A page-turner of a crime thriller . . . This is a world conveyed with convincing, terrible clarity’ – C. J. Sansom, bestselling author of Tombland, on Blood & Sugar
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About Percival Everett
Reviews for Daughters of Night: ´Once in a blue moon levels of fantastic´ - James O´Brien
Antonia Senior
The Times
Outstanding
Sarah Hughes
The I
Here’s one where the pages turn all by themselves and the plot doesn’t let you go
Diane Setterfield, author of Once Upon a River This is right up with the best of C. J. Sansom and Andrew Taylor . . . A real treat, for readers of literary, detective and historical fiction
Amanda Craig, author of The Lie of the Land Shepherd-Robinson’s ingenious plotting, eagle eye for detail and evocative prose picked me up and dropped me in the underbelly of Georgian London. Like all the best historical fiction it makes the reader think as much about the way we live now as then
Erin Kelly, author of He Said/She Said A dark, fascinating and richly imagined world – brilliantly done!
Ruth Ware, author of One By One and In a Dark, Dark Wood Rich in historical detail, impeccably plotted . . . Laura Shepherd-Robinson really is the queen of the historical crime novel
C. J. Tudor, author of The Chalk Man A very satisfying whodunnit . . . The twists and turns were masterful
James Oswald, author of the Inspector MacLean series Top-drawer historical fiction meets compulsive, just-one-more-chapter crime. Expertly plotted, gloriously grisly, with characters who stomp around your brain long after you turn the last page. In other words, masterful
Caz Frear, author of Sweet Little Lies and Shed No Tears A masterfully plotted labyrinth of a novel with a dangerously dark heart, teeming with memorable characters. Eighteenth-century London seethes from the page. I loved it
Robyn Young, author of Brethren and the Insurrection trilogy Just finished Daughters Of Night a stunning tour de force from the hugely talented Laura Shepherd Robinson breathtaking stuff
Chris Whitaker, author of We Begin at the End Laura Shepherd-Robinson has at once proved herself a star
Antonia Hodgson, author of The Devil in the Marshalsea It thrums with life and colour, the characters are bawdy and beautiful and sly and savage, the twists are wicked, and the denouement has a satisfying modern flavour without ever straying from the confines of the setting
Sarah Hilary, author of Fragile Every bit as good as Blood & Sugar, better even. Rich in historical detail, a fascinating exploration of the London sex-trade, and I loved the twist . . . Another terrific novel
Jo Spain, author of The Confession This book blew me away. Pitch-perfect within the eighteenth-century world and wholly immersive, it is an exquisite mystery, an exceptional voyage through danger and an extraordinary novel
Rachel Edwards, author of Darling Exquisitely crafted and enormous fun. Murder, mythology, deception and dark doings in Georgian London
Anna Mazzola, author of The Story Keeper Shepherd-Robinson’s second offering is without doubt even better than her award-winning debut . . . Every page is a joy to read – this deserves to sweep all before it in the end-of-year book awards
David Young, author of Stasi Child I absolutely loved it. Laura reimagines an eighteenth-century London with seemingly effortless clarity – I read it in a permanent state of rapture, covered in goose bumps. If you want to be lost and thrilled by another world, then this is the book for you
Emily Elgar, author of Grace Is Gone A historical murder-mystery masterpiece, with an exquisitely crafted, page-turning narrative and flawed characters that the reader can’t help but to root for
Marnie Riches, author of Tightrope Laura Shepherd-Robinson has written a story that is not only a page-turner of a thriller but, to an extent unusual in historical novels, where you feel you really are listening to a voice from the eighteenth century
C. J. Sansom, bestselling author of Tombland on Blood & Sugar Laura Shepherd-Robinson's historical crime thriller Daughters of Night brings Georgian London to life in all its seedy glory
Express
This richly woven tale brings history vividly to life . . . A gripping read
Adam Hamdy, author of Black 13 and Red Wolves [Daughters of Night] pitched the period perfectly, you got a real sense of what London was like. The attention to detail is exceptional and the plot races along. Loved it
Woman's Way
Spectacularly brilliant. Once in a blue moon levels of fantastic. One of the most enjoyable and enduring stories I have ever read
James O'Brien Utterly fascinating . . . Niftily plotted, vivid and thoroughly researched
Guardian
Daughters of Night is a deeply satisfying novel, reminiscent of Iain Pears’s later work in its feel for historical detail and character, and the way it subtly asks questions about our own age
The Observer
There is no doubt that Shepherd-Robinson is a rising star in the historical fiction firmament
Sunday Express
[Shepherd-Robinson] would be advised to clear her shelves for future awards
Financial Times
Deservedly described as a strong contender for the best historical novel of the year, it is a lushly written and evocative look at Georgian society, high and low, centering on the violent death of a woman who turns out not to be quite who she claimed. It is fuelled by a quiet anger over the lack of agency available to women then, and, by implication, now
Sarah Hughes
The i
Read Daughters of Night by Laura Shepherd-Robinson, but read Blood & Sugar first: a) because it's brilliant, and b) because the characters overlap. They're both murder mysteries set in a meticulously and hyper-vividly drawn 18th-century London. The first is eye-opening about slavery, the second is about prostitution, or rather the first is about race and the second is about woman. Total page-turners
India Knight
Sunday Times
[A] delectable whodunnit oozing with menace and lively period language
Woman & Home