After Brat left the orphanage, he ran away to sea, changing his name and eventually becoming a horse tamer in America until a broken leg brought him back to England. Here he encounters an actor who notices that Brat bears a striking resemblance to the missing heir of an estate. Brat agrees to become an imposter.
The family accept that Brat is Patrick, who was thought to have committed suicide. But Simon, Patrick's younger twin, who has now been disinherited, is sure that Brat is not who he says he is. After an attempt is made on Brat's life, he realises that Patrick's certainty stems from having murdered Patrick. But can he prove it? And even if he can, should he hurt the family who have made him a part of them?
Told from the limited third person perspective of Brat, and in the past tense, this elegantly written novel transcends the simple whodunnit genre. The characters are carefully drawn and complex, and the moral dilemmas at the heart are vivid. Brat's a crook and knows it, but unlike other novels written from the villain's perspective such as The Talented Mr Ripley by Patricia Highsmith, Brat has moral doubts about what he is doing. His ethical dilemmas form the bulk of the plot. He's a good chap doing a bad thing; most readers will be able to empathise with this allowing them to identify with Brat and, in the end, be rooting for him.
The inspiration for the story probably came from the Tichborne Affair in 1866 when a man claiming to be Roger Tichborne, who had been believed to have died in a shipwreck in 1854, was accepted by his mother as her son; a subsequent court case decided he was Arthur Orton, an Londoner who had become a butcher in Australia.
Selected quotes:
- "Riches, my boy, don't consist in having things, but in not having to do something you don't want to." (Ch 20)
The crime novel transformed, an entertaining and enlightening read. Placed 90th in the top 100 crime novels by the Mystery Writers of America
April 2026; 275 pages
- First published in 1949 by Heinemann
- My paperback edition was issued in 2009 by Arrow books
This review was written by
the author of Bally and Bro, Motherdarling
and The Kids of GodJosephine Tey crime novels:
- The Man in the Queue also published as Killer in the Crowd, originally written under the pseudonym Gordon Daviot (1929)
- A Shilling for Candles (1936)
- Miss Pym Disposes (1946)
- The Franchise Affair (1948)
- Brat Farrar (also called Come and Kill Me) (1949)
- To Love and Be Wise (1950)
- The Daughter of Time (1951)
- The Singing Sands (1952)
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