A Sunless Sea (William Monk 17)

author: Anne Perry
genres: Fiction | Crime | Mystery | Historical |
series: William Monk |

Start Reading Page List
A Sunless Sea (William Monk 17)

As commander of the River Police, Monk is accustomed to violent death, but the entrails hanging from the mutilated female body found on Limehouse Pier one chilly December morning move him with horror and pity. The victim’s name is Zenia Gadney. Her waterfront neighbors can tell him little—only that the same unknown gentleman had visited her once a month for many years. She was quiet and dull, unlike the usual fallen doxy; her pillar of support was respectable Dr Lambourn, recent suicide after his government requisitioned report on opium was discredited.

Monk's old superior Runcorn was first on the scene for Lambourn, and now suspects government suppression. Lambourn's beautiful wife wife Dinah, lies about her whereabouts, denies accusations, but Monk must arrest her despite his belief in her innocence. While public, press, government, and biased judge push for quick hanging before Xmas, Monk, his spirited wife Hester, and their brilliant barrister friend Oliver Rathbone, search for answers. From dank waterfront alleys to London’s fabulously wealthy West End, the three trail an ice-blooded murderer toward the unbelievable, possibly unproveable truth—and ultimately engage their adversaries in an electric courtroom duel. 

Page List
1. Page 1
2. Page 2
3. Page 3
4. Page 4
5. Page 5
6. Page 6
7. Page 7
8. Page 8
9. Page 9
10. Page 10
11. Page 11
12. Page 12
13. Page 13
14. Page 14
15. Page 15
16. Page 16
17. Page 17
18. Page 18
19. Page 19
20. Page 20
21. Page 21
22. Page 22
23. Page 23
24. Page 24
25. Page 25
26. Page 26
27. Page 27
28. Page 28
29. Page 29
30. Page 30
31. Page 31
32. Page 32
33. Page 33
34. Page 34
35. Page 35
36. Page 36
37. Page 37
38. Page 38
39. Page 39
40. Page 40
41. Page 41
42. Page 42
43. Page 43
44. Page 44
45. Page 45
46. Page 46
47. Page 47
48. Page 48
49. Page 49
50. Page 50
51. Page 51
52. Page 52
53. Page 53
54. Page 54
55. Page 55
56. Page 56
57. Page 57
58. Page 58
59. Page 59
60. Page 60
61. Page 61
62. Page 62
63. Page 63
64. Page 64
65. Page 65
66. Page 66
67. Page 67
68. Page 68
69. Page 69
70. Page 70
71. Page 71
72. Page 72
73. Page 73
74. Page 74
75. Page 75
76. Page 76
77. Page 77
78. Page 78
79. Page 79
80. Page 80
81. Page 81
82. Page 82
83. Page 83
84. Page 84
85. Page 85
86. Page 86
87. Page 87
88. Page 88
89. Page 89
90. Page 90
91. Page 91
92. Page 92
93. Page 93
94. Page 94
95. Page 95
96. Page 96
97. Page 97
98. Page 98
99. Page 99
100. Page 100
101. Page 101
102. Page 102
103. Page 103
104. Page 104
105. Page 105
106. Page 106
107. Page 107
108. Page 108
109. Page 109
110. Page 110
111. Page 111
112. Page 112
113. Page 113
114. Page 114
115. Page 115
116. Page 116
117. Page 117
118. Page 118
119. Page 119
120. Page 120
121. Page 121
122. Page 122
123. Page 123
124. Page 124
125. Page 125
126. Page 126
127. Page 127
128. Page 128
129. Page 129
130. Page 130
131. Page 131