Missing Joseph
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Missing Joseph is a 1993
crime novel Crime fiction, detective story, murder mystery, crime novel, mystery novel, and police novel are terms used to describe narratives or fiction that centre on criminal acts and especially on the investigation, either by an amateur or a profession ...
by
Elizabeth George Susan Elizabeth George (born February 26, 1949) is an American writer of mystery novels. She is best known for a series of novels featuring Inspector Thomas Lynley. The 21st book in the series was published in January 2022. The first 11 were ...
,the sixth featuring Inspector Lynley, first published by Bantam Books. Deborah and Simon St James take a winter break to
Lancashire Lancashire ( , ; abbreviated ''Lancs'') is a ceremonial county in North West England. It is bordered by Cumbria to the north, North Yorkshire and West Yorkshire to the east, Greater Manchester and Merseyside to the south, and the Irish Sea to ...
to ease their troubled marriage. But when the local vicar dies of apparently accidental poisoning, following a meal with the local herbalist, Simon expresses doubts over the efficiency of the local investigation, and Inspector Lynley is called in to investigate.


Plot

In ''Missng Joseph'', Lynley's friend Simon Allcourt St. James and his wife Deborah are on holiday in the village of Winslough, hoping to find solace from the miscarriages that have put their marriage under severe stress. However, they arrive to find that the vicar, Robin Sage, with whom Deborah has dealt in the past, is dead, from what seems to be accidental poisoning. The investigation by local constable Colin Shepherd has ruled the poisoning accidental: Sage's dinner host, local herbalist Juliet Spence, having mistaken water hemlock for wild parsnip. However, as Shepherd is Juliet's lover, this seems suspicious to Simon, who calls in Lynley of New Scotland Yard to reopen the case. Lynley discovers buried secrets and past scandals in the sleepy Lancashire village, including the fact that the victim had an infant son who died of SIDS and a wife who apparently took her own life. As it becomes increasingly clear that the poisoning of Robin Sage was not an accident, the narrative looks at the tortuous nature of human relationships, and the lengths to which a mother will go for the sake of her child.


Reception

The book received lukewarm reviews, with critics commenting adversely on the wordiness of the dialogue, and the fact that Lynley and Havers take a lesser role than expected in the plot. ''Kirkus Reviews'' criticizes the "polarized characters too often engaged in lengthy, numbing speechifying",although ''Publishers Weekly'' calls it "a...deftly plotted, highly atmospheric novel."


References

1992 American novels American mystery novels Bantam Books books {{1990s-mystery-novel-stub