The story starts a few days
after the death of Constance Brown, a social antagonist of Miss Hortense. A
dead man is found in her house weeks later, a stranger in the close-knit
Jamaican community of Bigglesworth. Flashbacks slowly reveal the history of the
community, how they collectively defended themselves against the long-term
residents who resented the immigrants. One very sore point was banking, as
traditional banks denied them access to services. Miss Hortense took the lead
in establishing the Pardner, a group of eight members who contributed £5 each
week to a communal fund, and one member took the collected money each week.
Thus, every 8 weeks each member received £40 or £240 in a year. In 1965 it had
the buying power of nearly $5500 in 2025.
Another function of The
Pardner was to investigate crimes against their community, as the British
police refused to take them seriously. Miss Hortense proved herself an able
detective but during the course of one investigation, a member of the Jamaican
community died. Miss Hortense was held responsible and was removed from the Pardner.
Constance took her place, as she had been anxious to do.
Despite her semi-ostracization
Miss Hortense continued to live in the house she saved her Pardner money to buy
and to work as a nurse in a suburb of Birmingham until she retired. Upon the
death of Constance and the discovery of the body in Constance’s house, Miss
Hortense is pulled back into an earlier Pardner investigation because the
community knows they need her more than ever.
The dialog in this book is entirely
Jamaican dialect. I had a hard time understanding it in places, others I
gathered the meaning from the context. The story line moves back and forth from
the early 1960s to the late 1990s, disrupting the flow. The concept is original
and interesting but it was a slow read.
Similar to Kia Abdullah’s
thrillers which describe the treatment of Middle Eastern immigrants in England.
·
Publisher:
Pantheon
·
Publication
date: June 10, 2025
·
Language:
English
·
Print
length: 352 pages
·
ISBN-10:
0593701623
·
ISBN-13:
978-0593701621
Amazon Associate Purchase
Link: https://amzn.to/3TMXzlL
Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2025
Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.


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