Trouble With Product X by Joan Aiken - ISBN: 9781471920899
Paperback
Perfume, kidnapped baby, exploding soup: Cornish conspiracy has trouble brewing.

Trouble With Product X

Sinister events disrupt a quiet Cornish village

$25.42

  • Paperback

    192 pages

  • Release Date

    12 April 2022

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Summary

A beautiful Cornish coastal village is the setting for a highly sinister conspiracy involving a kidnapped baby, mysterious monks and an almost irresistible new perfume…

‘Joan Aiken’s triumph with this genre is that she does it so much better than others’ - New York Times Book Review

Martha works for an advertising agency, filming a TV commercial on location on the stunning Cornish coast. The client is the eccentric owner of a chemicals company that has invented a new,…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781471920899
ISBN-10:1471920895
Author:Joan Aiken
Publisher:The Murder Room
Imprint:The Murder Room
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:192
Release Date:12 April 2022
Weight:172g
Dimensions:194mm x 130mm x 20mm
Series:Murder Room
What They're Saying

Critics Review

Witty and acute … a nice romantic thriller

Joan Aiken has an eye for original situations and characters … a stolen formula, a kidnapped baby and a strange brotherhood keep the plot bubbling. An engaging story with one of the nicest babies I have met for a long time * DAILY TELEGRAPH *Witty and acute … a nice romantic thriller * PUNCH *Brilliant light-hearted picture of search for missing formula … very funny – Julian Symons * SUNDAY TIMES *Superior stylish thriller with advertising agency background. A four month old baby steps into a key role in a headlong series of chases … characterisation of bizarre cast bang on target… the writing is at once witty and sensitive * CRIME CALENDAR *

About The Author

Joan Aiken

Joan Aiken, English-born daughter of American poet Conrad Aiken, began her writing career in the 1950s. Working for Argosy magazine as a copy editor but also as the anonymous author of articles and stories to fill up their pages, she was adept at inventing a wealth of characters and fantastic situations, and went on to produce hundreds of stories for Good Housekeeping, Vogue, Vanity Fair and many other magazines. Some of those early stories became novels, such as The Silence of Herondale, first published fifty years ago in 1964. Although her first agent famously told her to stick to short stories, saying she would never be able to sustain a full-length novel, Joan Aiken went on to win the Guardian Children’s Fiction Prize for The Whispering Mountain, and the Edgar Alan Poe award for her adult novel Night Fall. Her best known children’s novel, The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, was acclaimed by Time magazine as ‘a genuine small masterpiece’. In 1999 she was awarded an MBE for her services to children’s literature, and although best known as a children’s writer, Joan Aiken wrote many adult novels, both modern and historical, with her trademark wit and verve. Many have a similar gothic flavour to her children’s writing, and were much admired by readers and critics alike. As she said ‘The only difference I can see is that children’s books have happier endings than those for adults.’ You have been warned …

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