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  • Published: 27 April 2010
  • ISBN: 9780553386370
  • Imprint: Bantam Dell
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 400
  • RRP: $59.99

The Game

A novel of suspense featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes




For the first time in trade paperback and timed to coincide with the eagerly anticipated release of the brand-new Mary Russell mystery, The God of the Hive, comes the classic, New York Times bestselling mystery.

It’s only the second day of 1924, but Mary Russell and her husband, Sherlock Holmes, find themselves embroiled in intrigue. It starts with a New Year’s visit from Holmes’s brother Mycroft, who comes bearing a strange package containing the papers of an English spy named Kimball O’Hara—the same Kimball known to the world through Kipling’s famed Kim. Inexplicably, O’Hara withdrew from the “Great Game” of espionage and now he has just as inexplicably disappeared. 

When Russell discovers Holmes’s own secret friendship with the spy, she knows the die is cast: she will accompany her husband to India to search for the missing operative. But Russell soon learns that in this faraway and exotic land, it’s often impossible to tell friend from foe—and that some games aren’t played for fun but for the highest stakes of all…life and death.

BONUS: This edition contains an excerpt from Laurie R. King's Garment of Shadows.

  • Published: 27 April 2010
  • ISBN: 9780553386370
  • Imprint: Bantam Dell
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 400
  • RRP: $59.99

About the author

Laurie R. King

LAURIE R. KING is the New York Times bestselling author of twelve Mary Russell mysteries, five contemporary novels featuring Kate Martinelli, and the acclaimed novels The Bones of Paris, A Darker Place, Folly, Keeping Watch, and Touchstone. She lives in Northern California, where she is at work on her next Mary Russell mystery.

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Praise for The Game

  • "A rousing adventure story made credible by the sheer force of its characters' personalities and the sharply realized details of their surroundings. Good historical fiction is as close as we'll ever get to time travel, and historical fiction doesn't get any better than this. Nor do literary pastiches, which, at their best, like this one, take on a life of their own...." --The Denver Post