The Daughter of Time was discussed in a recent BBC Good Read rerun which is what prompted me to read it again.
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01nl6hx
My local library retrieved an old yellowing copy from the stacks which hadn't seen daylight in eight years and was first stamped and issued in 1964! Echoes of when we had those little pocketed library cards. The book was first published in 1951. I haven't read any of Tey's other books but plan to do so. She, real name Elizabeth Mackintosh, also wrote as Gordon Daviot.
From Wiki:
In 2015, Val McDermid argued that Tey "cracked open the door" for later writers such as Patricia Highsmith and Ruth Rendell to explore the darker side of humanity, creating a bridge between the Golden Age of Detective Fiction and contemporary crime novels, because "Tey opened up the possibility of unconventional secrets."
I've been rereading the Highsmith Ripley novels and two bios about her so it all fits rather nicely.
Farage fails to report 5 million gift!

