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The Last Confession of Thomas Hawkins

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A lively tale of “pitch-perfect suspense” set in eighteenth-century England—one of Publishers Weekly’s Top Ten Crime/Mystery Novels of the Year.
 
Winner of the CWA Historical Dagger Award
 
London, 1728. Tom Hawkins is headed to the gallows, accused of murder. Gentlemen don’t hang, and Tom will be damned if he’s the first—he is innocent, after all.
 
It’s hard to say when Tom’s troubles began. He was happily living in sin with his beloved—though their neighbors weren’t happy about that. He probably shouldn’t have told London’s great criminal mastermind that he was in need of adventure. Nor should he have joined the king’s mistress in her fight against her vindictive husband. And he definitely shouldn’t have trusted the calculating Queen Caroline. She’s promised him a royal pardon if he holds his tongue, but there’s nothing more silent than a hanged man. Now Tom’s scrambling to save his life and protect those he loves. But as the noose tightens, his time is running out.
 
 
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from January 4, 2016
      Set in England in the early 18th century, Hodgson’s sequel to 2014’s The Devil in the Marshalsea is as good as her stellar debut, which won the CWA’s Historical Dagger Award. A prologue depicts Thomas Hawkins, a gentleman who has spent time in debtors’ prison, on his way to the gallows for murder, hoping against hope for a last-minute pardon. The main narrative charts the twisted path that led to Hawkins’s desperate straits. He has been living with his lover, Kitty Sparks, in London, but Hawkins, who has found that he has a taste for danger, allies himself with James Fleet, “captain of the most powerful gang of thieves in St. Giles.” Hawkins soon finds himself out of his depth when Fleet gives him an assignment that enmeshes him in royal intrigue. And things only get worse when a neighbor Hawkins threatened is stabbed to death. Hodgson maintains pitch-perfect suspense, craftily constructs a fairly clued whodunit, and convincingly evokes the period. This second novel by the editor-in-chief at Little, Brown U.K. solidifies her position as a major talent in the genre. Agent: Clare Conville, Conville & Walsh Literary Agency (U.K.).

    • Library Journal

      November 15, 2015

      Occurring a few months after the events in the excellent tale that was The Devil in the Marshalsea, ne'er-do-well parson's son Tom Hawkins is once again in trouble in Georgian London. Recently out of debtor's prison, he is living off his girlfriend's money while translating erotica that she sells in her bookstore. First, he finds himself beholden to one of London's most notorious underworld figures. Then he gets involved in a late-night fight with the husband of King George's mistress, followed by a secret meeting with a conniving Queen Caroline. A priggish neighbor is stabbed to death in his bed, right after an inebriated Tom publicly threatens him. This all unfolds in confessional retrospect, as Hawkins is being wheeled off to the gallows for murder. VERDICT Hodgson has provided another pell-mell romp through the top and bottom of English society, as seen through the eyes of a gentleman who is both a rogue and a naif. Those who relish their historical action fast and vivid will enjoy the second installment of Hawkins's misadventures.--W. Keith McCoy, Somerset Cty. Lib. Syst., Bridgewater, NJ

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      May 15, 2016

      After surviving the adversity of debtor's prison in the The Devil in the Marshalsea, Thomas Hawkins, amiable scallywag and fallen gentleman, finds himself on the way to the gallows. Narrating his story in a confessional style, Hawkins reveals the espionage, machinations of underground gangs, and gambling debts that leave his life hanging in the balance as he hopes for a royal pardon. VERDICT Georgian London comes alive in this fast-paced, witty spellbinder that features a locked-room mystery, a bit of romance, and the misadventures of a charmingly roguish dandy. A good bet for fans of Henry Fielding's Tom Jones. (LJ 11/15/15)

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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