1. EachPod

Tom Mead

Author
Bliss Publications
Published
Thu 31 Jul 2025
Episode Link
https://writersatworkpodcast.podbean.com/e/tom-mead/

Joining me on this episode of Writers at Work is Tom Mead, whose latest novel, THE HOUSE AT DEVIL'S NECK, confirms he is a new master of the locked-room mystery. For the uninitiated, a locked-room mystery is a tale in which the crime in question is committed in circumstances under which it appears impossible for the perpetrator to enter the scene, commit the crime, and then leave undetected. Or at least that's what Wiki tells me. Typically, there's a supernatural element or the appearance of a supernatural element. The likes of John Dickson Carr, Agatha Christie, G.K. Chesterton, Arthur Conan Doyle and Edgar Allan Poe wrote locked-room mysteries in its golden age. More recently, Rachel Howzell Hall, Stieg Larsson, Adrian McKinty, and Ruth Ware, among others, have written well received locked-room tales.


Perhaps it says more about me than the form itself, but frankly, I can never figure out how the crime is committed and by whom, and thus how to write a locked-room mystery is beyond me.


THE HOUSE AT DEVIL'S NECK is Tom Mead's fourth novel featuring Joseph Spector, a retired magician and now an amateur investigator. The series is set in the late 1930s in and around London, and Tom fully exploits the atmosphere of the time and place. Nearby, and occasionally in opposition to Spector, is Inspector George Flint of Scotland Yard, a deliberate man unlikely to be swayed by anything other than facts.


With a wink now and then, Tom taps into all the tropes and yet produces tales that drip with nostalgia, yet surprises and delights.

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