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Book review: The Aladdin Trial

Alan Montague recommends the return of a crime thriller duo

July 12, 2018 13:57
Abi Silver
1 min read

A Burton and Lamb thriller” proclaims the cover of Abi Silver’s latest offering, The Aladdin Trial (Lightning Books, £8.99). It may seem premature to hail solicitor Constance Lamb and barrister Judith Burton as the kind of odd-couple, crime-solving duo capable of boosting book sales on name recognition alone. This is only their second outing after all. But, after last year’s confident debut in The Pinocchio Brief, Silver reunites them in another assured display of crime writing.

In that first appearance, Lamb and Burton uncovered the truth behind a murder in the closed world of a top public school. Here, they encroach on another secretive institution – a major NHS hospital in Hampstead, north London.

An elderly private patient, an artist, has fallen to a messy death from a window on the 11th floor. The possibility of an accident or suicide is dismissed by police when a suitable suspect presents himself in the form of a Syrian refugee who works as a cleaner on the ward.

He has been seen chatting with the woman, and, even more suspiciously, has bought her a copy of the Arabic folk tales, The One Thousand and One Nights, which is discovered by her bedside.