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Fiction Historical

The Burying Ground

A Thaddeus Lewis Mystery

by (author) Janet Kellough

Publisher
Dundurn Press
Initial publish date
Jul 2015
Category
Historical, Police Procedural, Historical
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781459724709
    Publish Date
    Jul 2015
    List Price
    $11.99
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781459724723
    Publish Date
    Jul 2015
    List Price
    $6.99

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Description

Someone is digging up the graves at the Strangers’ Burying Ground in Toronto — the final resting place of criminals, vagrants, indigents, and alcoholics — and the only person who seems to care is the sexton, Morgan Spicer. The authorities are unconcerned; after all, for years the growing village of Yorkville has been clamouring to have the bodies moved and the Burying Ground closed.

The distraught Spicer enlists the aid of his old friend Thaddeus Lewis, who has unexpectedly returned to preaching on the Yonge Street Circuit. The graveyard’s secrets lead Lewis and his son Luke into the hidden heart of 1851 Toronto where they discover a trail of corruption and blackmail tied to an old sexual scandal and a dangerous enemy intent on vengeance.

About the author

Janet Kellough is a professional storyteller who has written and appeared in numerous stage productions featuring a fusion of spoken word and music. Her five books in the Thaddeus Lewis series are On the Head of a Pin, Sowing Poison, 47 Sorrows, The Burying Ground, and Wishful Seeing. She lives in Prince Edward County, Ontario.

Janet Kellough's profile page

Editorial Reviews

Love the Murdoch Mysteries? Then you need to discover Janet Kellough's terrific Toronto series set in 1851 and featuring preacher.detective Thaddeus Lewis.

Globe and Mail

Kellough weaves a tale that is almost as much a history lesson as it is a thrill ride.

Publisher Weekly

This is an engaging historical mystery. The author gets the period detail just right, but she never lets her research overshadow the story, never yanking the reader out of the action with an unwieldy chunk of historical exposition. Fans of Chesterton's Father Brown or of Anne Perry and others who set their mysteries in Victorian England will find this Canadian variation much to their liking.

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