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Sent to His Account
One phone call can change everything…
Miles de Cogan thought that he was set to live out a simple life with a cantankerous old lady for his landlord, but this is all turned on its head with a phone call.
Being a de Cogan by name and blood, Miles is overjoyed when he finds out that he no longer has to live the life of an impoverished Dublin bookkeeper.
Inheriting a prosperous estate called County Wicklow and the title to go along with it, Miles learns of the death of his cousin, a baronet.
Excited to get started with his new life, Miles befriends his late cousin’s lawyer and advisor Barnes and Miles is keen to fully immerse himself in village life, although he is slightly nervous of the rules and expectations he must now adhere to.
Being a generous man of progressive ideas one of Miles’s first aims is to develop and improve the village flour mill with the hope of collaborating with the local villagers and soon finds himself starting to envisage his life in amongst these old funny people.
Suddenly, the humdrum simple lifestyle of the Irish village is soon broken – with a murder…
Miles’s overbearing neighbour Tom Reid is found, having died a painful and horrific death.
Is it Reid’s plans to build a roadhouse and upset the old tradition of the village that has incurred the wrath of the Dangan residents, or is there something much more underhanded at play?
Could it be the ghost of Mile’s late predecessor that haunts everyone?
Sent to his Account is a thrilling murder mystery that leaves you wondering: can anyone really be trusted?
Praise for EilÃs Dillon
‘Her best yet … her picture of academic life is the best we have read since Dorothy Sayers gave usGaudy Night .’ — Social and Personal (London)
‘The mutual relations of the professors crackle with well-expressed malice.’ - Times (London) Literary Supplement
EilÃs Dillon , 1920-1994, was an Irish author of over 50 books. She was a Fellow of the Royal Society for Literature and founded the Irish Children's Book Trust. In 1987 Dillon and her husband moved permanently to Dublin where she supported up and coming Irish authors, a prize in her memory is given annually as part of the Bisto Book of the Year Awards.