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They say marriages are made in heaven . . . but the devil appears to have hit the local wedding store. It's a sleepy Sunday morning in the quaint English town of Bromgrove. The body of Gino Everard, the flamboyant owner of popular bridal boutique The Confetti Club, is discovered stuffed in one of the dress cupboards. Gino was a minor celebrity, adored by all who crossed his path. Detective Gilbert Markham and his old partner DS George Noakes are on the case. But it's tough to find any leads. Who would kill such a beloved local figure? Days later, the body of Antonia Rambart, a consultant at…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
They say marriages are made in heaven . . . but the devil appears to have hit the local wedding store. It's a sleepy Sunday morning in the quaint English town of Bromgrove. The body of Gino Everard, the flamboyant owner of popular bridal boutique The Confetti Club, is discovered stuffed in one of the dress cupboards. Gino was a minor celebrity, adored by all who crossed his path. Detective Gilbert Markham and his old partner DS George Noakes are on the case. But it's tough to find any leads. Who would kill such a beloved local figure? Days later, the body of Antonia Rambart, a consultant at the boutique, is found in her home, horrifically dressed up as a bride. What message is the killer trying to send? Then Antonia's assistant turns up dead - propped up like a broken marionette against the side of a toilet cubicle. Is there a serial killer on the loose? And why are they targeting one of the most popular stores in town? Markham and Noakes must solve the puzzle and catch the killer before they strike again.
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Autorenporträt
Catherine Moloney is a Liverpool writer of Irish-American heritage. After graduating in Jurisprudence from Jesus College (University of Oxford), she was called to the Bar at Gray's Inn. Despite qualifying as a barrister, her first love was English; this led to a PhD in English Literature at Birkbeck College (University of London). In her academic career, she lectured and published widely on the subject of tuberculosis and nineteenth-century literature, but somehow managed to avoid contracting galloping hypochondria and turned her attention to crime fiction.