Picked up
Christopher Fowler's 'Bryant & May: Oranges and Lemons: A Peculiar Crimes Unit Mystery' (2020). This is a long-running series featuring elderly English detectives
Arthur Bryant and John May solving the most bizarre crimes.
The whole
Bryant & May series set in London started in 2003 with
'Full Dark House'.
It ended with the 20th book in the series 'London Bridge is Falling Down' (2021). I have heard of it but I've never picked up a book.
Apparently this book is a thematic sequel to 'The Lonely Hour' (2019); that's like Book 15 in the series. I haven't read that. Never mind. Book 16 'Oranges and Lemons' works as a standalone too. In this book, a prominent politician Speaker of the House survived after being nearly crushed by a fruit truck on its delivery route to a festival at St Clements Danes Church.
Now, the Peculiar Crimes Unit (PCU) has been disbanded; and the old office is being turned into a vegetarian tapas bar. John May has been missing for a month and Arthur Bryant is recovering from surgery for a gunshot wound. We see Sidney Hargreaves introduced to the team. She's the new addition, gung-ho and full of attitude. The book rosters its narrators and shares different perspectives.
It's a classic whodunit. It's a convoluted plot done by Professor Stride, a disgruntled academic. He uses nursery rhymes and folk songs in his attacks on other prominent figures in town, seeking to destabilize the establishment, exposing the rot within the church and government.
The title of the book came from an
old English folk song 'Oranges and Lemons'. It's damn creepy lah because it's also a children's ring song singing about church bells, debts and payments, a candle to light you to bed, and a chopper to chop off one's head. LOL Anyway, the locations in the story also takes a page from the folk song — from the church bells at St Clement's, to St Martin's, Old Bailey, Shoreditch, Stepney and Bow.
I also felt as though I went on a tour of London. Ha.
It seems I am the only one who'll be left without a new position, which suits me perfectly, as I plan to retire and go as far off the grid as possible, in this case a bungalow with faulty wiring on the Isle of Wight. I no longer want to live in a metropolis that thinks it's acceptable to charge fifteen quid for a cup of artisanal coffee that's been passed through the digestive system of a tapir.
Adding insult to injury, I have received a letter of complaint that our most senior detectives used inappropriate language during the last investigation and are guilty of being, I quote, "old white males in a woke world.' I don't know about 'woke' but Mr Bryant certainly needs to be woken in our meetings. I imagine being old and white is somewhat beyond his control unless he's planing to reincarnate.