The Franchise Affair

Robert Blair was about to knock off from a slow day at his law firm when the phone rang. It was Marion Sharpe on the line, a local woman of quiet disposition who lived with her mother at their decrepit country house, The Franchise. It appeared that she was in some serious trouble: Miss Sharpe and her mother were accused of brutally kidnapping a demure young woman named Betty Kane. Miss Kane's claims seemed highly unlikely, even to Inspector Alan Grant of Scotland Yard, until she described her prison -- the attic room with its cracked window, the kitchen, and the old trunks -- which sounded remarkably like The Franchise. Yet Marion Sharpe claimed the Kane girl had never been there, let alone been held captive for an entire month! Not believing Betty Kane's story, Solicitor Blair takes up the case and, in a dazzling feat of amateur detective work, solves the unbelievable mystery that stumped even Inspector Grant.
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Community Reviews
Wow, can Josephine Tey write! I enjoy about her writing from the first page. From the beginning this had a Jane Austin tingle.
Maybe because as I read I felt Tey was having so much fun with her characters.
I also felt it had been finished around 20 years after the First World War. This really would have given a female writer a different edge to her writing.
Robert was So spoilt and entitled but fabulous. Mrs Sharp was So sharp poor but with a real knowledge of horses.
Tey seems to be able to have an opinion about everyone of her characters and has me either re read a section because it was so good or laugh out loud about the inner dialogue of Robert the protagonist, or I was coping a quote.
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