Reporter Colin
Crampton of the Brighton Chronicle has the afternoon off. He and his girlfriend
are sitting in a tea shop, facing the beach, and playing a rather silly game.
They’re inventing a story about another customer in the shop, a man with a
briefcase. He has an envelope that he clearly wants to put into the briefcase,
but he doesn’t want to open it in the shop. And then they see a young man, a
James Dean lookalike (this is 1963), who seems to be watching the man with the
briefcase.
In an
instant, they look back, and the man with the briefcase is gone. And so is the
James Dean lookalike. By this time, they’re so caught up in their game that it’s
become real. They hurry to the nearby train station, and see briefcase man ready
to board. And soon the James Dean lookalike shows up, knocks the man to the
ground, and makes off with the briefcase. Crampton runs after him, chases him
into car traffic, where the young man is struck and rather gruesomely killed.
Crampton picks up the suitcase. Inside is about $20,000 in 100-dollar bills.
$20,000 in US money at the beach in Brighton?
Returning
to the station, Crampton finds the robbery victim has disappeared. His would-be
robber has no identification except for two tattoos (both sayings by James
Dean). The reporter will write a crackerjack crime and mystery story for
tomorrow’s paper – only to find out his crime has been superseded by one of the
biggest crimes in British history – the Great Train Robbery of 1963. But that
story is in London, and Crampton is in Brighton. So he begins the slog-work it
takes to try to solve what happened at the train station.
Peter Bartram |
Murder
in the Morning Edition
by British author Peter Bartram is
the first part of a three-part novella series linked with a common story, the
other two being Murder in the Afternoon
Extra and Murder in the Night Final.
Each is self-contained, but with an overall mystery story serving as the common
thread.
Bartram
has had a long career in journalism, including being a reporter on a weekly
newspaper, an editor for newspapers and magazines in London, and freelance
journalism. He’s a member of the Society of Authors and the Crime Writers’
Association. Bartram has also published a collection of Colin Crampton stories,
Murder from the Newsdesk, and three
other Colin Crampton mystery novels.
And he
knows the business he’s writing about in these stories. Murder in the Morning Edition has all the hallmarks of an
intriguing story about journalism, a dash of noir, and a solid mystery to
solve.
I love stories with their setting in writing/journalism. This sounds like a good vacation read.
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