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White Mischief (novel)

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Language
  
English

Pages
  
299

Author
  
James Fox

Publisher
  
Jonathan Cape (UK)

3.6/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
1982

Originally published
  
1982

Page count
  
299

Country
  
United Kingdom

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Media type
  
Print (hardback & paperback)

Similar
  
Extreme Killing, Violence and Security o, British Art and the First Worl, The Langhorne sisters, Randomized Response and Relat

White Mischief is a novel by British journalist James Fox, first published in hardback 1982 by Jonathan Cape and in paperback in 1984 by Penguin. It is the fictionalized account of the unsolved murder in 1941 of Josslyn Hay, the Earl of Erroll, a British expatriate in Kenya. The title is a pun on the 1932 Evelyn Waugh novel Black Mischief. The book was adapted for film in 1987.

Contents

Synopsis

Part novel and part journalism the book is divided into two distinct sections. Initially presented as a classic murder mystery, the first part of the story focuses on the dissolute lifestyles of the wealthy elite in colonial Kenya. Casual affairs, wife-swapping, habitual drunkenness and cocaine abuse were all common. The main protagonists are the victim, Josslyn Hay, a handsome womanizing aristocrat, his beautiful married lover Lady Diana Broughton and Diana’s much older husband Sir Delves Broughton. Although the identity of the murderer was never actually discovered at the time, the author claims to have found new evidence pointing to Sir Delves, and the second part of the book concentrates on the author’s investigations and interviews with surviving participants in the drama, both in Kenya and in England.

Film adaptation

White Mischief was released in 1987, directed by Michael Radford and starring Charles Dance, Greta Scacchi and Joss Ackland.

References

White Mischief (novel) Wikipedia