To Love and Be Wise explained

To Love and Be Wise
Author:Josephine Tey
Country:United Kingdom
Language:English
Series:Inspector Grant
Genre:Detective
Publisher:Peter Davies
Macmillan (US)
Release Date:1950
Media Type:Print
Preceded By:The Franchise Affair
Followed By:The Daughter of Time

To Love and Be Wise is a 1950 mystery detective novel by the British writer Josephine Tey. It was the fourth of six novels featuring Detective Inspector Grant of Scotland Yard during the Golden Age of Detective Fiction.[1] [2] [3]

Synopsis

At a theatrical party in London Grant briefly encounters a young American, whose connections as a famous photographer grant him an invitation to stay at the home of a famous writer in an English village that has become fashionable among the artistic set. A few days later Grant is called in when the American has disappeared, mostly likely into the river. What at first seems a routine case of accident, or at worst murder, becomes for the detective a more complex investigation of identity as he begins to ponder whether any accident or crime has taken place at all.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Reilly p.1373
  2. Miskimmin p.158
  3. Herbert p.192