BKMT READING GUIDES
Seven Dials 
  by Anne Perry 
                    
                    	
                    Mass Market Paperback : 352 pages
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Introduction
Thomas Pitt, mainstay of Her Majesty's Special Branch, is summoned to Connaught Square mansion where the body of a junior diplomat lies huddled in a wheelbarrow. Nearby stands the tenant of the house, the beautiful and notorious Egyptian woman Ayesha Zakhari, who falls under the shadow of suspicion. Pitt's orders are to protect?at all costs?the good name of the third person in the garden: senior cabinet minister Saville Ryerson. This distinguished public servant, whispered to be Ayesha's lover, insists that she is as innocent as Pitt himself is. Pitt's journey to uncover the truth takes him from Egyptian cotton fields to the insidious London slum called Seven Dials, to a packed London courtroom where shocking secrets will at last be revealed.
From the Hardcover edition.
London detective Thomas Pitt is investigating the murder of a junior diplomat by a  notorious Egyptian woman and her lover, a senior Cabinet minister involved in  negotiating the conflict between Egypt's cotton growers and England's textile  industry. Lovat, the diplomat, once served in Egypt, and to unravel the mystery  of his death, Pitt travels to Alexandria, where he finds that the beautiful  Ayesha Zakhari is not who she appears to be--and that Lovat's murder may be tied  to an old crime which, if exposed, could set the Middle East aflame. While Pitt  is in Egypt, his wife, Charlotte, occupies herself with a more mundane  matter--the disappearance of a valet whose sister is a friend of the Pitt's  housemaid. It's not long before the reader realizes the connection between the  two crimes; meanwhile, Perry layers this smoothly plotted mystery with a  fascinating history of Egypt in the days of the British Empire and the religious  and economic tensions whose repercussions still resonate more than a century  later. Perry, the author of two Victorian-era series (the other stars  investigator William  Monk), does her usual fine job of bringing the colorful time period alive,  helped along by the details of domestic life provided by her protagonists'  wives, interesting and accomplished women who have lately played all but equal  roles in solving their husbands' cases. --Jane Adams
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