Morbid Passion

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1930s
A01=Robert Holtom
Albert Hall
Auditorium
Author_Robert Holtom
Banker
Banking
Below stairs
Bentley
Bentley car
Betray
Betrayal
Butler
Category=FFD
Category=FFH
Category=FXT
Chauffeur
City of London
Clue
Commedia dell arte
Cook
Costume
Crime
Crime book
Crime books
Crime fiction
Crime novel
Crime novels
Cross dresser
Cross dressing
Cross-dress
Dancefloor
Degenerate
Deviance
Deviant
Disguise
eq_bestseller
eq_crime
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Firework
forthcoming
Fortnum and Mason
Freud
Freudian
Golden Age Crime
Historical Crime
Homosexual
LGB
LGBT
LGBTQ
LGBTQIA
London
London Soho
Miss Marple
Mystery book
Nancy Drew

Product details

  • ISBN 9781835413197
  • Weight: 369g
  • Dimensions: 130 x 203mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Jun 2026
  • Publisher: Titan Books Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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A gripping 1930s-set whodunnit and love letter to Golden Age crime, this sequel to A Queer Case features amateur sleuth Selby Bigge, who must solve a murder at Lady Malcolm's Servants' Ball in London's Royal Albert Hall. Perfect for fans of Nicola Upson's Josephine Tey novels.

London 1930.

Selby Bigge and his aristocratic sidekick Theodora Smythe are invited to dine with Doctor Hector Fortescue and his family, discovering a web of unrest in the household. The good doctor is adamant that homosexuals can be 'cured' of their perversions, oblivious to the fact his son Lancelot is 'as fruity as a pineapple'.

Later that evening Theodora becomes Theo and attends the Servants' Ball with Selby - a fancy-dress dance for servants, which attracts queers of all classes. Lancelot makes a surprise appearance dressed as Harlequin, as do other members of the Fortescue household. And before the night is out Selby and Theo will have another murder to solve.

Digging deeper, the duo - assisted by the impossibly glamorous nightclub singer Lady Splendid - discover that secrets abound both above and below stairs in the Kensington home of the Fortescue family. And the stakes get even higher when Selby encounters policemen he's met before, who'd love to arrest him for being queer.

Can Selby solve the crime or will this be his last dance?

Robert Holtom is an award-winning playwright and storytelling coach, based in London. Their play 'Dumbledore Is So Gay' won a VAULT Festival Origins Award for new work and an Offies Commendation. It has since played at the Pleasance and the Southwark Playhouse, receiving five stars from the Daily Express, Broadway World and Theatre Weekly. Robert also runs workshops in writing and communication skills. You can find Robert on Twitter/X at @Robert_Holtom; on Instagram at @robertholtomwriter and at their website robertholtom.co.uk.

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