Tessa's website describes the Lady Montfort Series (this is the forth book in the series) a "well-mannered mystery". This description is perfect. I didn't want to classify it as a "cozy" necessarily and I think well-mannered relates to all the characters in the book....except for the killer of course.
A Lady Montfort Mystery
by Tessa Arlen
Minotaur Books
Pub Date
13 Mar 2018
Click HERE to read Chapter 1Description
In 1916, the world is at war and the energetic Lady Montfort
has persuaded her husband to offer his family’s dower house to the War
Office as an auxiliary hospital for officers recovering from shell-shock
with their redoubtable housekeeper Mrs. Jackson contributing to the war
effort as the hospital’s quartermaster.
Despite the hospital’s success, the farming community of Haversham, led by the Montfort’s neighbor Sir Winchell Meacham, does not approve of a country-house hospital for men they consider to be cowards. When Captain Sir Evelyn Bray, one of the patients, is found lying face down in the vegetable garden with his head bashed in, both Lady Montfort and Mrs. Jackson have every reason to fear that the War Office will close their hospital. Once again the two women unite their diverse talents to discover who would have reason to murder a war hero suffering from amnesia.
Brimming with intrigue, Tessa Arlen's Death of an Unsung Hero brings more secrets and more charming descriptions of the English countryside to the wonderful Lady Montfort and Mrs. Jackson series.
_____________________________________________________________
Despite the hospital’s success, the farming community of Haversham, led by the Montfort’s neighbor Sir Winchell Meacham, does not approve of a country-house hospital for men they consider to be cowards. When Captain Sir Evelyn Bray, one of the patients, is found lying face down in the vegetable garden with his head bashed in, both Lady Montfort and Mrs. Jackson have every reason to fear that the War Office will close their hospital. Once again the two women unite their diverse talents to discover who would have reason to murder a war hero suffering from amnesia.
Brimming with intrigue, Tessa Arlen's Death of an Unsung Hero brings more secrets and more charming descriptions of the English countryside to the wonderful Lady Montfort and Mrs. Jackson series.
_____________________________________________________________
Q & A WITH TESSA ARLEN
DEATH OF AN UNSUNG HERO (On Sale March 13, 2018)
What inspired you to begin writing mysteries? Was the Lady Montfort
Mysteries a series you always wanted to write?
Ever since I read Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes when I was fourteen
I wanted to write mysteries. I particularly enjoyed the Golden Age mystery writers:
Dorothy L. Sayers Agatha Christie, Josephine Tey, Ngaio Marsh and Margery
Allingham often referred to as the Queens of Crime who wrote detective fiction
between the wars. And it wasn’t until I started to write mystery that I
discovered that they considered their whodunits as a game for both author and
reader: the elements of the mystery must be clearly presented but in such a way
as to arouse curiosity, to entice the reader to try and guess the outcome and
if they were as clever as the author, to guess it before the denouement.
I also wanted to write about the great country houses of
England with their enormous and gorgeous gardens in the 1910s, where life for
the privileged few was idyllic thanks to their servants, their money and the
rigidity of the class system. The ‘have-nots’ of course had a much grimmer time
of it. My two amateur sleuths in the Lady Montfort series are from opposite
ends of the class system and struggle with issues in context with their time
and place in history. Clementine Elizabeth Talbot the Countess of Montfort is
from of one of the oldest families in England and her housekeeper, Edith
Jackson, was raised in a parish orphanage. Together these two remarkable women
step lightly across the great class divide of Edwardian Britain to unite their
considerable talents in clandestine inquiries that take them into all walks of
life in the new 20th century when even the status quo was on the cusp of great change.
You have wonderful leading ladies in Lady Montfort and her
no-nonsense housekeeper, Mrs. Jackson. Are there any supporting characters that
came easily to you in the writing process?
I am particularly fond of my villains: I think Teddy Mallory
in Death of a Dishonorable Gentleman
is a perfect example of an Edwardian rotten apple and I had great fun writing
him. I write a short biography for my murderers: their physical appearance, idiosyncrasies,
their likes and dislikes. I really enjoy enhancing the more positive aspects of
their characters to camouflage their evil side, and then revealing little
glimpses of their particular flaws.
But writing Clementine’s children came really easily to me,
because I have three of my own –now grown-up, who gave me tons of fodder. In Death of an Unsung Hero my favorite supporting
character is Lady Montfort’s daughter Althea, who has skillfully avoided
marriage to a ‘man of substance and background with a bank account to match’
and has managed to engineer all sorts of opportunities for world travel. In the
first three books she is a distant figure always off on another jaunt, but now
that Britain is at war she is marooned on the family estate and is trying her
best to run the local chapter of the Women’s Land Army or the Land Girls as
they were called. The WLA was an organization tasked with providing farmers
with labor –terribly important to an island cut off by the German U-boat
blockade from importing food from America and Canada. Althea has to deal with
farmers who don’t like the idea of city girls, or girls at all, working on
their land. At the same time she is causing her mother all sorts of headaches
as she is particularly independent in spirit and often irritated by the petty
convention that young women of that time had to put up with. Althea was great
fun to write she is bright, generous and sunny tempered but determined always
to have a say in her world, to be effective and to contribute in a meaningful
way. Althea could in fact be any one of my three daughters! There are some
great scenes between her and her mother on the business of chaperones, and some
lively moments with her and her brother when they decide to help their mother
and Mrs. Jackson with some sleuthing. I found myself sympathizing with poor
Clementine as she tried to deal with her independent daughter and her son,
Harry, temporarily invalided out of the war, both of whom would rather be
anywhere than on their father’s country estate.
The officers are suffering from shell-shock (PTSD),
among other things, when they arrive at the auxiliary hospital. How much
research did you have to do regarding how PTSD was treated in the early 20th
century?
I loved doing research for this
aspect of the Great War, and my interest in shell shock goes back to a
perfectly wonderful book written by Robert Graves in which he recounts about
his WW1 experiences and those of his friends in Goodbye to All That. A complete non-conformist Graves blew the lid
off the belief that it was “sweet and right to die for one’s country.” He was
also a close friend of Siegfried Sassoon, the war poet, who was sent to
Craiglockhart hospital for throwing his Military Cross into the Thames and
writing a letter to The London Times
about the waste of young men lives. It was such an inflammatory piece that he
only avoided court martial by agreeing to undergo treatment for shell shock.
From there I read about the work done at Craiglockhart hospital for shell shock,
or Dottyville as Sassoon called it, by two very talented doctors who were
pioneers of PTSD therapies used today: John Rivers and Arthur Brock. They
believed that talk therapy and ergo therapy, the therapy of doing simple and useful
everyday tasks, were instrumental in helping their patients recover from the mental
stress of trench war fare. Craiglockhart encouraged its officer patients to
write poetry and in my fictitious Haversham Hall hospital the patients were
encouraged to paint. Any occupation that
‘outed” the locked down, stiff upper lip suffering of men on the front line for
months on end was encouraged. Drs. Brock and Rivers were remarkable men for
their time. Most military doctors treated shell-shocked men and officers with
all sorts of barbaric methods: electric shock treatment, ice cold baths and other
cruel treatments were the norm as of course was social ridicule. In 1916, after the Battle of the Sommes, the
numbers of men suffering from what we call PTSD increased in such overwhelming
numbers that it was finally recognized that their mental suffering was genuine
and that they were not malingers, homosexuals or cowards.
Since you are currently conquering Edwardian England
in the Lady Montfort Mysteries, is there another time period that you would be interested in writing about?
I enjoy writing about times in
British history that are full of conflict. I am particularly fascinated by the British
Home Front in WW2 and in particular the arrival of the American armed forces in
England in 1942 (after Pearl Harbor) when the United States joined the allies
to fight Nazi Germany. There were over a million American men stationed in
England for the last years of the war. The ‘Yank Invasion’ brought a breath of
supercharged air into a nation burdened by the loss of their young men after
three years of war, the horrors of the London blitz and the austerity of food
rationing and fuel shortages. Since I am an Englishwoman married to an American
this offers me a great opportunity to write about the peculiar little misunderstandings
inevitable between “two cultures separated by a common language.” But what is
even more interesting to a mystery writer is that during these years a depleted
police force struggled to cope with a
soaring increase in crime mostly due to the very strict black out in force
throughout the country, often making life on the Home Front almost as uncertain
as it is on the frontline.