A tale of intrigue and secret lives in a clerical Kensington setting.
Book of Psalms Mystery Series
This series plunges readers into a world of intrigue and secrets, set against the backdrop of London's venerable churches and elite legal circles. A clergyman burdened by a shadowed past faces threats that could shatter his career and personal life. Teaming up with an old friend, he embarks on a thrilling quest to unravel a conspiracy before it destroys everything he holds dear. Expect a modern take on classic mysteries, filled with suspense and atmospheric tension.






Recommended Reading Order
- 1
- 1
A Book of Psalms mystery, the first in the series, set in a Kensington parish, where the vicar receives an anonymous letter threatening him with exposure.
- 2
- 2
A Book of Psalms murder mystery, set in a Norfolk parish.
- 3
The third in the Book of Psalms mysteries. Death at the Deanery - sudden and unnatural death. Someone should have seen it coming. For even before Stuart Latimer arrives as the new Dean of Malbury, shock waves are reverberating through the tightly-knit and insular Cathedral Close, with sweeping changes afoot.
- 4
'A woman priest at St Margaret's? Over my dead body!' Dolly Topping, head of the national organisation 'Ladies Opposed to Women Priests' and wife of one of the churchwardens, feels that strongly about it. It is unfortunate, therefore, that Father Julian, the well-loved curate of the Pimlico church, should have been killed in a burglary gone wrong.
- 4
Dolly Topping ist entsetzt, dass in ihrer Gemeinde St. Margaret eine Frau das Amt des Kurators übernehmen soll. Aber ihre lautstarken Proteste werden übertönt von den Ermittlungen zu einem Mord. Das Opfer - Father Julian, der in der Gemeinde sehr beliebt
- 5
The fifth in the Book of Psalms mysteries. 'Peaceful' is the most common entry in the visitors' book of fifteenth-century St Michael's Church, with its glorious angel roof and its medieval Doom painting. But away from the church, and beneath the idyllic veneer, the tiny Norfolk village of Walston is anything but harmonious.