A Christmas Garland: A Novel
A Christmas Garland: A Novel book cover

A Christmas Garland: A Novel

Hardcover – Deckle Edge, October 30, 2012

Price
$11.96
Format
Hardcover
Pages
208
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345530745
Dimensions
5.75 x 0.75 x 7.75 inches
Weight
10.4 ounces

Description

From Booklist When Lieutenant Victor Narraway arrives in Cawnpore, India, emotions are still raw from the 1857 Indian mutiny and the atrocities that rebels committed at the Bibighar. In addition, a prisoner, Dhuleep Singh, escaped, leading to the massacre of a British patrol. After an investigation, the army found that medical orderly Corporal John Tallis was the only man who didn’t have an alibi during the escape. Tallis is being tried as a traitor, and the 20-year-old Narraway is to handle his defense. The army wants the trial and execution held quickly, and the commanding officer doesn’t want Narraway making waves. Tallis, however, proclaims his innocence, and Narraway believes him. Narraway worries his inexperience will cost Tallis his life, but then with the help of two children, he cracks the case. This engaging historical mystery offers an introspective look at the character, Narraway, who will become the future boss of Thomas Pitt, star of Perry’s long-running series. Perry’s tenth Christmas novel is a winner. --Sue OBrien Anne Perry is the bestselling author of nine earlier holiday novels— A Christmas Homecoming, A Christmas Odyssey, A Christmas Promise, A Christmas Grace, A Christmas Journey, A Christmas Visitor, A Christmas Guest, A Christmas Secret, and A Christmas Beginning —as well as the William Monk series and the Charlotte and Thomas Pitt series set in Victorian England, five World War I novels, and a work of historical fiction, The Sheen on the Silk . Anne Perry lives in Scotland. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Lieutenant Victor Narraway walked across the square in the cool evening air. It was mid-December, a couple of weeks before Christmas. At home in England it might already be snowing, but here in India there would not even be a frost. No one had ever seen snow in Cawnpore. Any other year it would be a wonderful season: one of rejoicing, recalling happy memories of the past, and looking forward to the future, perhaps with a little nostalgia for those loved ones who were far away.But this year of 1857 was different. The fire of mutiny had scorched across the land, touching everything with death.He came to the outer door of one of the least-damaged parts of the barracks and knocked. Immediately it was opened and he stepped inside. Oil lamps sent a warming yellow light over the battered walls and the few remnants of the once-secure occupation, as they had been before the siege and then its relief. There was little furniture left whole: a bullet-scarred desk, three chairs that had seen better days, a bookcase and several cupboards, one with only half a door.Colonel Latimer was standing in the middle of the room. He was a tall and spare man well into his forties; a dozen Indian summers had burned his skin brown, but there was little color beneath it to alleviate the weariness and the marks of exhaustion. He regarded the twenty-year-old lieutenant in front of him with something like an apologetic look.“I have an unpleasant duty for you, Narraway,” he said quietly. “It must be done, and done well. You’re new to this regiment, but you have an excellent record. You are the right man for this job.”Narraway felt a chill, in spite of the mild evening. His father had purchased a commission for him, and he had served a brief training in England before being sent out to India. He had arrived a year ago, just before the issue of the fateful cartridges at Dum Dum in January, which later in the spring had erupted in mutiny. The rumor had been that the bullets were coated with animal grease, in the part required to be bitten into in order to open the cartridge for use. The Hindus had been told it was beef fat. Cows were sacred, and to kill one was blasphemy. To put cow fat to the lips was damnation. The Muslims had been told it was pork fat, and to them, the pig was an unclean animal. To put that grease to your lips would damn your soul, although for an entirely different reason.Of course, that was not the only cause of the mutiny by hundreds of thousands of Indians against the rule of a few thousand Englishmen employed by the East India Company. The reasons were more complex, far more deeply rooted in the social inequities and the cultural offenses of a foreign rule. The bullets had merely been the spark that had ignited the fire.Also it was true, as far as Narraway could gather, that the mutiny was far from universal. It was violent and terrible only in small parts of the country. Thousands of miles remained untouched by it, lying peaceful, if a little uneasy, under the winter sun. But the province of Sind on the Hindustan plains had seen much of the very worst of it, Cawnpore and Lucknow in particular.General Colin Campbell, a hero from the recent war in the Crimea, had fought to relieve the siege at Luckxadnow. A week ago he and his men had defeated 25,000 rebels here at Cawnpore. Was it the beginning of a turning of the tide? Or just a glimmer of light that would not last?Narraway stood to attention, breathing deeply to calm himself. Why had he come to Latimer’s notice?“Yes, sir,” he said between his teeth.Latimer smiled bleakly. There was no light in his face, no warmth of approval. “You will be aware of the recent escape of the prisoner Dhuleep Singh,” he went on. “And that his guard, Chuttur Singh, was hacked to death in the course of Dhuleep’s escape?”Narraway’s mouth was dry. Of course he knew it; everyone in the Cawnpore station knew it.“Yes, sir,” he said obediently, forcing the words out.“It has been investigated.” Latimer’s jaw was tight, and a small muscle jumped in his temple. “We know Dhuleep Singh had privileged information regarding troop movements, specifically regarding the recent patrol that was massacred. We also know the man could not have escaped without assistance.” His voice was growing quieter, as if he found the words more and more difficult to say. He cleared his throat with an effort. “Our inquiries have excluded every possibility except that he was helped by Corporal John Tallis, the medical orderly.” He met Narraway’s eyes. “We will try him the day after tomorrow. I require you to speak in his defense.”Narraway’s mind whirled. There was a chill like ice in the pit of his stomach. A score of reasons leaped to his mind why he could not do what Latimer was asking of him. He was not even remotely equal to the task. It would be so much better to have one of the officers who had been with the regiment during the siege and the relief do it, someone who knew everyone. Above all, they should have an officer who was experienced in military law, who had defended men dozens of times and was known and respected by the regiment.Then a cold, sane voice inside assured him that it was precisely because he was none of these things that Latimer had chosen him.“Yes, sir,” he said faintly.“Major Strafford will be here any moment,” Latimer continued. “He will give you any instruction and advice that you may need. I shall be presiding over the court, so it is not appropriate that I should do it.”“Yes, sir,” Narraway said again, feeling as if another nail had been driven into the coffin lid of his career. Major Strafford’s dislike of him dated back to the time before he had joined the regiment. Almost certainly it stemmed from Narraway’s brief acquaintance with Strafford’s younger brother. They had been in the same final year at Eton, and little about their association had been happy.Narraway had been academic, a natural scholar and disinclined toward sports. The younger Strafford was a fine athlete but no competition for Narraway in the classroom. They existed happily enough in a mutual contempt. It was shattered one summer evening in a magnificent cricket match, nail-bitingly close, with Strafford’s team having the slight edge—until Narraway showed a rare flash of brilliance in the only sport he actually enjoyed. The dark, slender scholar, without a word spoken, bowled out the last three men on Strafford’s team, including the great sportsman himself. The fact that he did it with apparent ease was appalling, but that he did not overtly take any pleasure in it was unforgivable.And Strafford Minor had never been able to exact his revenge on the field, which was the only place he could redeem his honor. Other victories did not count. And practical jokes or barbed wit looked to be nothing more than the spite of a bad loser.But that was boyhood, two years ago and thousands of miles away.“Captain Busby will prosecute,” Latimer was going on. “The evidence seems simple enough. You will be free to interview Corporal Tallis at any time you wish, and anyone else you feel could be helpful to your defense. If there are any legal points that you need to clarify, speak to Major Strafford.”“Yes, sir.” Narraway was still at attention, his muscles aching with the effort of keeping complete control of himself.There was a brief knock on the door.“Come,” Latimer ordered.The door swung open and Major Strafford came in. He was a tall, handsome man in his early thirties, but the echo of Narraway’s schoolfellow, so much his junior, was there in the set of his shoulders, the thick, fair hair, the shape of his jaw.Strafford glanced at Latimer.“Sir.” He saluted, then, as he was given permission, relaxed. He regarded Narraway expressionlessly. “You’d better read up on the case tonight and start questioning people tomorrow morning,” he said. “You need to be sure of the law. We don’t want anyone afterward saying that we cut corners. I presume you appreciate that?”“Yes, sir.” Narraway heard the edge of condescension in Strafford’s voice and would dearly like to have told him that he was as aware as anyone else of how they would all be judged on their conduct in the matter. More than that, the future of British rule in India would be flavored by reports of decisions such as this. The whole structure of Empire hung together on the belief in justice, in doing things by immutable rules and a code of honor that they themselves never broke.Thousands of men were dead already, as well as women and children. If the British ever regained control and there was to be any kind of peace, it must be under the rule of law. It was the only safety for people of any color or faith. Otherwise there was no hope left for anyone. Right now there seemed to be little enough in any circumstances. Delhi had fallen, Lucknow, Agra, Jhelum, Sugauli, Dinapoor, Lahore, Kolapore, Ramgarh, Peshawar—and on and on. The list seemed endless.“Good,” Strafford said curtly. “Whatever you think you know, you’d better come and see me and tell me at least the outline of your defense.” He looked at Narraway closely, his blue eyes curiously luminous in the light of the oil lamp. “You must be sure to mount some defense—you do understand that, don’t you? At least put forward a reason why a man like Tallis should betray the men he’s served beside all his career. I know he’s a quarter Indian, or something of the sort, but that’s no excuse.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “An annual treat,” declared
  • The Wall Street Journal
  • of Anne Perry’s Victorian-era holiday mysteries. Now she continues this magnificent tradition with
  • A Christmas Garland,
  • a yuletide tale set in exotic India. This time the mistress of mystery tells the story of a terrible crime that sets the stage for another: accusing an innocent man of murder.   The year is 1857, soon after the violent Siege of Cawnpore, with India in the midst of rebellion. In the British garrison, a guard is killed and an Indian prisoner escapes, which leads to yet more British deaths. Cries for revenge are overwhelming. Despite no witnesses and no evidence against him, a luckless British medical orderly named John Tallis is arrested as an accomplice simply because he was the only soldier unaccounted for when these baffling crimes were committed.   Though chosen to defend Tallis, young Lieutenant Victor Narraway is not encouraged to try very hard. Narraway’s superiors merely want a show trial. But inspired by a soldier’s widow and her children, and by his own stubborn faith in justice, Narraway searches for the truth. In an alien world haunted by memories of massacre, he is the accused man’s only hope.   The trial of John Tallis equals the white-knuckle best of Anne Perry’s breathtaking courtroom dramas. And thanks to a simple Christmas garland and some brilliant detective work, Narraway perseveres against appalling odds, learning how to find hope within himself—and turn the darkest hour into one full of joy and light.
  • PRAISE FOR THE CHRISTMAS NOVELS OF ANNE PERRY
  • A Christmas Homecoming
  • “Could have been devised by Agatha Christie . . . [Perry is] a modern master.”
  • —Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
  • “Vastly entertaining . . . uplifting and thought-provoking by turns.”
  • —The Star-Ledger
  • A Christmas Odyssey
  • “[Perry] writes with detail that invades the senses.”
  • —Lincoln Journal Star
  • A Christmas Promise
  • “Poignant . . . should be on the Christmas stocking list of anyone who likes a sniffle of nostalgia.”
  • —The Washington Times
  • A Christmas Grace
  • “[A] heartwarming, if crime-tinged, complement to the holiday season.”—
  • Booklist
  • A Christmas Beginning
  • “Intriguing . . . Perry’s use of period detail is, as always, strong and evocative.”
  • —The Seattle Times

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(125)
★★★★
25%
(104)
★★★
15%
(62)
★★
7%
(29)
23%
(96)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

A Happy Christmas Indeed

I have always loved Perry's Christmas-themed mysteries. I enjoy her formula of taking minor characters from the Pitt and Monk series' and letting them have starring roles in the Christmas novels. Narroway is perhaps the most interesting character going in the Pitt series these days other than Vespasia, so it was great to get a glimpse into his early exploits. I also loved the themes of hope, justice and honor - perfect for a Christmas tale. This was also a taut thriller that I read in one sitting. Highly recommended.
8 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Narraway's First Investigation

Christmas comes at the end of October for me with the arrival of Anne Perry's latest Christmas novel; it's a present I can't wait to open. And A Christmas Garland lives up to its promise. As I read the book, two movies came to mind for two different reasons. The first was Hart's War, which starred Bruce Willis and Colin Farrell. Set in a prisoner of war camp in World War II, the movie features a trial in which a young, green lieutenant (Farrell) is forced by the colonel (Willis) to defend a prisoner in a court martial. The similarities between the Lt. Hart and 20-year-old Lt. Victor Narraway, are evident. Neither was in the army by choice, as Hart had been drafted and Narraway's father had forced him to join.

Four Feathers came to mind because it is also a tale of British soldiers in a hostile land--the Sudan, in this case--where they are not wanted and are badly outnumbered by the natives, who want nothing more than to kill them all and take back their country. The soldiers in Christmas Garland also wonder why they are here in this alien land "for queen and country." There have been horrible atrocities including the savage deaths of the women and children that the soldiers and the men of the East Indian Company have brought with them.

Lieutenant Narraway must defend Corporal John Tallis, a medical orderly who is accused of freeing a Sikh prisoner; the prisoner killed his guard, also a Sikh, and fled to the rebels to betray a patrol of which he had inside knowledge. Nine of the ten in the patrol died. Tallis has no motive. He is only on trial because he is the last man standing, so to speak. He was alone and unseen at the time of the escape, so he had no provable alibi. Narraway believes him to be innocent, as Tallis proclaims himself to be, but how can he prove it? But Narraway is a very persistent man who will not rest until he has done all he can to save Tallis and to serve justice. It is his first step on his path to his career in the police.

This is a book I was truly unable to put down until I had finished it. I felt pity for Tallis and for Narraway as well, who might have been in over his head. Complicating matters is the fact that everyone wants Tallis to hang, and they want it done quickly. To make things worse, Narraway had been at school with the major's younger brother, and they had disliked each other immensely.

Although this book is quite different from most of the other Christmas novels in that it has an exotic setting and is far from the drawing rooms of England, it is as fascinating as the others. I strongly advise reading it; I know you will enjoy it and will learn something as well.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Flawed ending

I enjoy reading Anne Perry's novels and especially look forward to reading her Christmas books. Without revealing the ending, the killer did something, revealed at the end of the story, that I would not have expected him to do, so for me, the ending was flawed.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Saved by the Ending

A Christmas Garland is Anne Perry's 2012 contribution to her set of Christmas mysteries. Set in India in 1857, it is not very Christmasy, and it is extremely bloody with graphic descriptions of brutal massacres. The plot involves the trial of Corporal John Tallis, a medical orderly who was accused of murdering a guard and assisting in the escape of a prisoner who went on take part in the killing of a patrol of soldiers. Lieutenant Victor Narraway, who had no legal training or experience, was ordered to defend Tallis with two days notice because the defendant was required to have some sort of defense before he was hanged. There was no evidence of his guilt, but he was arrested because he was the only person without an alibi. Narraway liked Tallis and believed him when he said he was innocent, and he wanted to provide a real defense. Oddly, most of the soldiers who testified also liked him, but they were very willing to accept his guilt without proof and they wanted to hang him quickly and put an end to the matter. As the trial progressed, I was amazed at how willing everyone was to believe everything that was said. Nothing was questioned until the very end. It was the ending that I considered the salvation of the book. If things had turned out differently, I would have given three stars at most and maybe two. But the solution of the mystery and the conclusion of the trial were satisfying enough to merit four stars. Fans of Anne Perry's Christmas mysteries should enjoy it.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A Christmas Dissapointment

I have usually enjoyed the Christmas novellas by Anne Perry, but this one was even more disappointing than the last one. There was very little Christmas to the theme, a lot of repetition of the same facts, and the family of one of the deceased soldiers added little to the plot. The premise of the story was interesting, the mystery involved was plausible, but the solution, when it came, had very little proof of how it was gotten. I'm done with buying these "Christmas" stories of hers-I'll just stick with Monk & Hester, which seem to be better thought out.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Young Victor Narraway Faces Challenge in War Torn Victorian India

Regular readers of Anne Perry will recognize a central character, Victor Narraway, in her 2012 Christmas novel "A Christmas Garland".

Narraway's a young officer in the British army in India, not the prominent figure of the author's "Dorchester Terrace" and "Treason at Lisson Grove", the predecessor of Thomas Pitt as commander of the Special Branch in the former novel and his boss in "Treason at Lisson Grove."

It's December 1857 and twenty-year old Lieutenant Victor Narraway, two years out of Eton and in besieged India for only a year, has been posted to the British army's garrison in the town of Cawnpore, site of the June 1857 siege and subsequent massacre of hundreds of civilians and soldiers. Britain, with only a few thousand troops, is barely hanging on in India when a guard in Cawnpore garrison is killed and a Sikh prisoner escapes, which leads to more British deaths as the army goes after the escapee.

Even though there are no witnesses to testify against him and no evidence against him, British medical orderly Corporal John Tallis is arrested as an accomplice because he was the only soldier unaccounted for when the crimes were committed. Everybody -- from Dr. Rawlins, his superior officer, to the men of the garrison who've turned to him for treatment of wounds and everyday ailments -- agree that Tallis is a brilliant orderly, with skills that would make him an outstanding doctor. This makes the crime he's charged with all the more puzzling.

Narraway is told by Colonel Latimer -- who picks him to defend Tallis and who will serve as presiding judge -- to put up a good defense but not to try very hard with a man who insists that he's innocent. Latimer obviously wants everything wrapped up by Christmas.

Although he's not a lawyer, and he only has a few days to prepare his defense, Narraway moves quickly to learn the details of the escape and the murder of the guard from the witnesses. Inspired by a soldier's widow and her children, and by his own stubborn faith in justice, Narraway searches for the truth. In a town haunted by fresh memories of massacre, he is the orderly's only hope.

"A Christmas Garland" reminded me of one of my favorite films, "Breaker Morant" (1980) set during the Boer War at the beginning of the 20th Century in South Africa, directed by Bruce Beresford, where an inexperienced British officer played brilliantly by Jack Thompson is assigned to defend three Australian lieutenants on trial for shooting Boer prisoners.

Like Beresford's masterpiece -- and I recommend it without reservation -- much of the action in "A Christmas Garland" is a courtroom drama, with the defense attorney investigating the crimes. And thanks to a simple Christmas garland given him by the widow's young daughter -- and a game of hide-and-seek, Narraway comes to a different conclusion than that of the officer in charge of Tallis's trial -- and the prosecuting officer, Captain Busby, who has some history with Narraway.

I sometimes joke that Anne Perry and Joyce Carol Oates -- both born in 1938 like the present reviewer -- write faster than I can read. How Perry and Oates can be so prolific and maintain the highest standards of writing will always be a mystery to me!
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Christmas in India

This novel is set in Cawnpore, India after the Siege of Cawnpore, 1857. A man is accused, by being the only man not accountable for, of allowing a prison break, and subsequent murder of further British deaths.

A young Lieutenant, Narraway, must try to defend John Tallis knowing that it is considered only a formality and that the judge has already determined his man's guilt.

In two days, Narraway has to recreate the actual break and re-interview all the persons connected. He meets the widows and children of many of the fallen soldiers. Through intense study, Lt. Narraway begins to form an alternative version of what truly happened.

The courtroom drama holds you in suspense as the Lieutenant's version is played out. Will justice ring true for the Christmas season so badly needed by this garrison? This novel is quickly read and yet is not short on details or story. Ms. Perry does herself proud.
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

VALUE

EVERYTHING WAS GREAT - NO COMPLAINTS!
✓ Verified Purchase

Five Stars

Another great read.
✓ Verified Purchase

perry at Xmas

not her best Christmas story, but good