Thank you to everyone who bought The Soho Jazz Murders and Blackmail In Bloomsbury last month. January was my best-ever sales month in five years of publishing. I managed 700 sales (not including all the Kindle Unlimited borrows) and The Soho Jazz Murders made the top 20 ‘hot new releases’ in historical mystery on Amazon. I was particularly thrilled that this put me in rather good company next to fellow newcomer Agatha Christie!
Read on for news of travels, book and movie recommendations, and a free book promotion.

Reviews of The Soho Jazz Murders
One reviewer kindly headlined their review of The Soho Jazz Murders: “The new Agatha Christie!” Here are a few other reviews that made my day:
‘An entertaining and atmospheric read. I like the developing relationship between Marjorie and her employer, Mrs Jameson.’
‘This was an engaging read that took you through night life in London in the 1920’s… The detective duo are great, one sophisticated, one spirited and game to try anything. All in all an enjoyable novel.’
‘A relatively new series in which you should definitely invest your time!’
Please do take time to leave a review if you’ve read any of my books. For independent authors without a big marketing budget, reviews make a huge difference in helping us find new readers.
Back on the Blue Train
The next-but-one Marjorie Swallow novel will be set on the glorious Cote d’Azur in the south of France. I hopped back on the train from London to the Riviera at the start of January for two weeks staying in a very glamorous art deco apartment overlooking Nice harbour. Even Mrs Jameson would have to approve of the accommodation.
Turquoise sea, acid-yellow mimosa in the Cours Saleya flower market and ice-cream hues of the painted houses in the old town – strawberry, lemon and pistachio – meant grey old England felt a very long way away. This was the place the British upper classes used to flock to in winter, before hot summer beach holidays became the fashion. Artists and writers loved it too, from Picasso to Matisse, Monet to Renoir, Chekov to F Scott Fitzgerald, Hemingway to HG Wells.
It wasn’t too hard to imagine a few murders among the mimosa for Marjorie and Mrs Jameson to investigate. But if I need to jog my memory about the locations, perhaps I can squeeze in another trip south on the Train Bleu before I write it!



Work In Progress
It wasn’t all play and research, however – I knuckled down to some serious writing in Nice, meaning that I’m on track to finish writing the next Marjorie Swallow mystery, Death At Chelsea, in a couple of weeks. Then it goes off to my lovely editor and beta readers for their thoughts, before I work on the revisions. It’s on track for release in May – thank you to everyone who has pre-ordered. If you want to be sure of getting it, you can do so here.
Recommendations
I have a hot new release to recommend this month. I’m devouring Lynn Morrison’s 1920s ‘Dora and Rex’ series, featuring sleuth Theodora Laurent, a femme fatale with a mysterious past. The latest in the series, The Roman Riddle, was published on Tuesday. It sees Theodora and sidekick Lord Reginald “Rex” Bankes-Fernsby decamp to the Eternal City, where the British ambassador, no less, is accused of murder. I can’t wait to read more.
The next recommendation isn’t new at all (it came out in 2001), but if you love Downton Abbey and murder mysteries, then you should definitely check out Gosford Park, a 1930s-set murder mystery starring Dame Maggie Smith and written by Downton author Julian Fellowes. I re-watched it this week on Netflix and thought it was funny, sharp-edged and gloriously entertaining.
Cozy mystery promo
February is definitely the season to snuggle up with a good mystery – so if you’re running short of reading material, try the February Cozy Mystery Freebies promotion, running all this month. It has more than 30 free cozy mystery e-books to fill up your e-reader.
Competition winners!
Congratulations to Bryony Taha, Karen O’Conner and Holly Bradford who won signed copies of The Soho Jazz Murders for correctly identifying the murder victim in Blackmail In Bloomsbury.






This festive short story features a sparkling Christmas from Mrs Jameson’s younger days–with a touch of mystery, of course. It’s December 24, 1892 and Iris is nineteen years old. She’s visiting Rome for the first time with her dauntless Aunt Isabel, and the Christmas Eve Ball at the Palazzo del Fiori is about to go very wrong…
I’m long been a fan of Benedict Brown, whose 1920s-set Lord Edgington mysteries are a delight. He has a new Christmas book out, The Christmas Bell Mystery, featuring the revered detective and his less-revered grandson Chrissie as they investigate a classic whodunnit in a snowbound manor house.
Lying dead at the bottom of the steep cliffs, however, is not Mr Cunliffe, but the gardener himself. And his plans for restoring the gardens to their former glory are missing. Jerome St Clair has gone from suspect to victim. This certainly puts a twist in the tinsel!




The quote above comes from historian Lucy Worsley’s biography of Agatha Christie. It’s extremely readable and tells a fascinating story of a life from Victorian girlhood into the 1970s. I’m a big fan of Miss Worsley’s history programmes and podcasts, so when she visited Canterbury’s Marlowe Theatre to talk about Agatha Christie, I grabbed a ticket. She’s a brilliant presenter and it was a very entertaining evening. Not only is she formidably knowledgeable, she’s very funny and glamorous. She also remained kind and patient with all of us who’d queued to have her sign our books.

If you’ve already finished it and are anxiously awaiting the next in the series, good news! I’ve sent the first draft of The Soho Jazz Murders to my editor and all is going well for publication in January.