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book 1947

The Ballycronin mystery

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A murder mystery set in Ireland and featuring the sleuth Shamus Burke. Although published in 1947, the book appears to be set at least twenty years earlier, in the aftermath of the Great War. Shamus's task begins when Phaudric strikes up an acquaintance with Terence O'Toole, a Dublin mining engineer whose father owns a lead mine at Ballycronin. Terence has returned from the war to find the mine is mortgaged, and the mortgagee, a local financier called Frederic Crabone, has put his own man, Owen, in charge. Owen has fenced off a part of the works and appears to be making a great deal of money. Terence's brother Michael has attempted to investigate, but has been killed, apparently in an accidental mining explosion. Phaudric introduces Terence to the investigator Shamus Burke, who agrees to look into the death of Michael and the inexplicable source of great wealth in a broken-down lead mine. An additional touch of Irish colour is lent by the amiable IRA saboteur, Billy 'the Bridge Buster' Hogarty. Neither of the problems require much detection, and both are ultimately solved by the revelation of specialist knowledge. The book is unlikely to provide much of an intellectual challenge, and there were times when I wondered if it was actually intended for young adults. But it is entertaining enough to watch Shamus and Phaudric go through their paces in the rural countryside of Ballycronin, and we can forgive Shamus his appalling prejudice against Welshmen when the true facts about Owen emerge. Webster seems to be largely forgotten, but he wrote at least two more books about Burke and Coffey -- The Tontine Treasure and The Secret of Baron's Folly.

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