ng streets of 1920s Asheville in this thrilling third installment of The Stephen Robbins Chronicles, as fan-favorite Robbins confronts the dangerous contrast between appearance and reality at the exclusive Grove Park Inn.
It's the autumn of 1924, and Benjamin Loftis has a problem. A college girl is discovered--naked and dead--in one of the finest rooms of his beloved Grove Park Inn. To protect the reputation of this jewel in the crown of North Carolina and all the Southern mountains, Loftis calls in Stephen Robbins, a local man famous in some circles for finding missing people and solving unsolvable crimes.
Robbins, now scarred and battered by life's wars, would rather retreat from the world than dive headfirst into a new mystery. But he agrees to help and is quickly swept into the social hierarchy of Asheville's complex and harshly stratified society, running head-on into the financial and political elite who control this mountain town--those who want
a murderer caught but not necessarily
the murderer.
With so many socialites focused on reputation over truth, will Robbins be able to find the devil walking among them and bring them to justice? Find out in
The Devil Hath a Pleasing Shape, a thrilling noir set against the backdrop of the jazz age in America.
Want more Stephen Robbins? Read more of his story in A Short Time to Stay Here
and My Mistress' Eyes are Raven Black.