The Dying Day (Malabar House)
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Review\nThis is a crime novel for everyone; for those who love traditional mysteries there are clues, codes and ciphers, but it also had a harder edge and a post-war darkness. A brilliant second outing for Persis Wadia―Ann Cleeves\nThe Da Vinci Code meets post-Independence India. I'd be surprised if I read a better book this year ―M.W. Craven\nPersis is brave, admirable, complicated and maddening, and is one of the few superlative and original characters emerging from modern literature―On-Magazine\nAs this charming series continues, readers will be cheering [Persis's] successes―SHOTS\nA thoroughly enjoyable yarn, complete with atmospheric setting, intricate puzzle-solving and much derring-do―Mail on Sunday\nThe second in this excellent series . . . a delicious treat of a historical crime novel―The Observer\nEarly indications are that Vaseem Khan has struck gold by setting detective novels in 1950s Bombay. And that is why this is a gem of a novel―The Eastern Eye\nA wonderful, pacy, literary mystery―Steve Cavanagh\nA hugely entertaining, devilishly clever and immersive murder mystery―Antonia Hodgson\nVaseem Khan is at the height of his powers in The Dying Day . . . First-rate story telling from a first-rate writer―Daily Express Books of the Year, chosen by Imran Mahmood\nReminiscent of some of the classics of crime fiction―Crime Review\nThis is a crime novel for everyone; for those who love traditional mysteries there are clues, codes and ciphers, but it also had a harder edge and a post-war darkness. A brilliant second outing for Persis Wadia―Ann Cleeves\nThe Da Vinci Code meets post-Independence India. I'd be surprised if I read a better book this year ―M.W. Craven\nPersis is brave, admirable, complicated and maddening, and is one of the few superlative and original characters emerging from modern literature―On-Magazine\nAs this charming series continues, readers will be cheering [Persis's] successes―SHOTS\nA thoroughly enjoyable yarn, complete with atmospheric setting, intricate puzzle-solving and much derring-do―Mail on Sunday\nThe second in this excellent series . . . a delicious treat of a historical crime novel―The Observer\nEarly indications are that Vaseem Khan has struck gold by setting detective novels in 1950s Bombay. And that is why this is a gem of a novel―The Eastern Eye\nA wonderful, pacy, literary mystery―Steve Cavanagh\nA hugely entertaining, devilishly clever and immersive murder mystery―Antonia Hodgson\nA priceless manuscript. A missing scholar. A trail of riddles.\nBombay, 1950\nFor over a century, one of the world's great treasures, a six-hundred-year-old copy of Dante's The Divine Comedy, has been safely housed at Bombay's Asiatic Society. But when it vanishes, together with the man charged with its care, British scholar and war hero, John Healy, the case lands on Inspector Persis Wadia's desk.\nUncovering a series of complex riddles written in verse, Persis - together with English forensic scientist Archie Blackfinch - is soon on the trail. But then they discover the first body.\nAs the death toll mounts it becomes evident that someone else is also pursuing this priceless artefact and will stop at nothing to possess it . . .\nHarking back to an era of darkness, this second thriller in the Malabar House series pits Persis, once again, against her peers, a changing India, and an evil of limitless intent.\nGripping, immersive, and full of Vaseem Khan's trademark wit, this is historical fiction at its finest.
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