

One is to deliver a gift from a man named Jamie Knox (from the previous book Who Buries the Dead) to his grandmother and, perhaps, learn more from her about the uncanny resemblance between him and Knox. His reason for making the journey there is two-fold. The story of When Falcons Fall opens with Sebastian traveling to Ayleswick-on-Tene, a small village in Shropshire, with his wife, Hero, and their small son, Simon.


Readers who’ve been following along with the series can appreciate how complicated he is however, you can pick up any of the books in the series and still connect with the complexity of his character. Cyr, Viscount Devlin, is superbly detailed. While her plotting is intricate, it’s her characterizations that are the chief draw for me. Harris does ominous scene-setting marvelously well, drawing you into the mystery from the first page and deeply immersing readers in both the crime and in the world of Regency England. Cyr series right from the first book, and my interest in the long series remains undiminished. It has been my distinct pleasure to read C.S. Then that fly came crawling out of her mouth. She lay at the edge of a clover-strewn meadow near the river, the back of her head nestled against a mossy log, her slim hands folded at the high waist of her fashionable dove gray mourning gown. In the misty light of early morning, the dead woman looked as if she might be sleeping, her dusky lashes resting against cheeks of pale eggshell, her lips faintly parted.
