
Parameters
- 400 pages
- 14 hours of reading
More about the book
An intriguing case of higher education and lower morals: the entertaining new Albert Campion mystery. Suffolk, 1970. Albert Campion is back in Black Dudley, once the scene of murder and mayhem but now home to the brand-new University of Suffolk Coastal. Appointed to the role of the university's Visitor, Campion finds he has a curiously vague remit, but his initial visit to the concrete campus takes an unexpected turn when the body of charismatic Chilean professor Pascual Perez-Catalan, a rising star and genius scientist in the field of geochemistry, is fished out of the ornamental lake. It seems Pascual was unpopular among his fellow academics and lecturers, his trail-blazing research taking up most of the university's new computing capacity . . . and he was also a keen ladies man.
Book purchase
Mr Campion's Visit, Mike Ripley
- Language
- Released
- 2020
- product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
- (Hardcover)
Payment methods
We’re missing your review here.
- Title
- Mr Campion's Visit
- Language
- English
- Authors
- Mike Ripley
- Publisher
- Severn House Publishers Ltd
- Released
- 2020
- Format
- Hardcover
- Pages
- 400
- ISBN10
- 0727892576
- ISBN13
- 9780727892577
- Series
- Tags
- Fiction, Mystery & Thriller, Historical Fiction, Mystery Novels, British Literature, Historical Mystery
- Rating
- 3.6 out of 5
- Description
- An intriguing case of higher education and lower morals: the entertaining new Albert Campion mystery. Suffolk, 1970. Albert Campion is back in Black Dudley, once the scene of murder and mayhem but now home to the brand-new University of Suffolk Coastal. Appointed to the role of the university's Visitor, Campion finds he has a curiously vague remit, but his initial visit to the concrete campus takes an unexpected turn when the body of charismatic Chilean professor Pascual Perez-Catalan, a rising star and genius scientist in the field of geochemistry, is fished out of the ornamental lake. It seems Pascual was unpopular among his fellow academics and lecturers, his trail-blazing research taking up most of the university's new computing capacity . . . and he was also a keen ladies man.

