The Bad Quarto: An Imogen Quy Mystery

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Macmillan, Apr 3, 2007 - Fiction - 245 pages
The campus of St. Agatha's College, Cambridge University, is steeped in history. One particular building, however, has a history that most would rather forget---a tower that has drawn several students to their death. Much discouraged by the authorities, it is a college tradition for students to try their luck jumping the gap between a window and a pediment---nicknamed Harding's Folly---and the gap has recently claimed another victim, a glamorous and controversial Shakespearean scholar.
Imogen Quy (rhymes with "why"), college nurse and amateur sleuth, is surprised that such a brilliant man would take such a foolish risk. But tragic accidents do happen---or was it an accident? One undergraduate is so convinced of foul play that he takes it upon himself to confront the suspected murderer by mounting a production of the "bad quarto"---a shortened, pirated script---of Shakespeare's Hamlet.
Wise, compassionate Imogen, who has been described as "sharp as needles and soft as butter," has just the right mixture of involvement and detachment to sort out what really happened in the most literate and compelling academic mystery since Dorothy L. Sayers's Gaudy Night.

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Contents

Section 1
1
Section 2
5
Section 3
23
Section 4
37
Section 5
51
Section 6
65
Section 7
77
Section 8
91
Section 13
147
Section 14
159
Section 15
171
Section 16
183
Section 17
197
Section 18
209
Section 19
217
Section 20
223

Section 9
103
Section 10
115
Section 11
125
Section 12
137
Section 21
235
Section 22
241
Section 23
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Jill Paton Walsh, whose work includes the Booker Prize-nominated novel "Knowledge of Angels"," " took up the mantle of Dorothy L. Sayers with her "New York Times" bestselling completion of the Lord Peter Wimsey mystery, "Thrones, Dominations, " followed by "A Presumption of Death." She is also the author of three previous Imogen Quy mysteries: "The Wyndham Case, A Piece of Justice "(which was shortlisted for the Crime Writers' Association Gold Dagger Award), and "Debts of Dishonor." In 1996 she received the Commander of the Order of the British Empire, and was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

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