First published : 2011 Allen & Unwin, Australia; 2011 St Martin’s Press / Minotaur
The mystery begins at the Chelsea Flower Show in London, where two American tourists are stalked by a killer…
Following Perestroika, vast fortunes were made from the rapid privatisation of Russian state assets by sharp entrepreneurs. When Vladimir Putin came to power and wanted to recover these funds, many of the new billionaires fled to the West, and in particular to London, where generous tax breaks and a reluctance to extradite the oligarchs to their homeland offered a comfortable sanctuary. This is the background to DCI Brock and DI Kolla’s latest investigation, in which the multi-millionaire Mikhail Moszynski, with his new Caribbean model wife Shaka and a colourful Russian entourage, has created a glitzy palace in Chelsea Mansions, a grand Victorian residential block in one of London’s golden postcodes, to the discomfort of the locals.
Chelsea Mansions draws the Scotland Yard detectives Brock and Kolla into a new clash with an old and wily enemy, the corrupt politician Sir Nigel Featherstone Hadden-Vane, who is nurturing Moszynski’s ambitions for a British knighthood. It also confronts David Brock with his own very personal history and Kathy Kolla with a challenge to her professional integrity, which sends her to the USA, to investigate Moszynski’s KGB past.
Satisfyingly rich fare for puzzle addicts and conspiracy theorists alike, capped by a string of climactic fireworks that are still exploding in the very last paragraph. (Kirkus Reviews, USA)
Maitland interweaves a smart plot, which includes a few shockers and more than a few Cold War roots, with major character developments for Brock and Kolla, and Chelsea Mansions is among the best entries in a top-notch series. (Richmond Times-Dispatch, USA)