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'No, don't be ridiculous! This kind of thing doesn't happen in a school" Frances Garnham, 24, arrives at the unorthodox Arrows Academy Primary as the new year one teaching assistant to work alongside the egocentric Caroline Macintosh, and after clashing with her on the first day Frances doesn't think the year could get any worse. But Frances was wrong... The school is turned completely upside down when Caroline is found dead the following morning! When old-fashioned Detective Barry Hughes is brought in to uncover the incident and rules it as unsuspicious, Frances gets investigating. Especially…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
'No, don't be ridiculous! This kind of thing doesn't happen in a school" Frances Garnham, 24, arrives at the unorthodox Arrows Academy Primary as the new year one teaching assistant to work alongside the egocentric Caroline Macintosh, and after clashing with her on the first day Frances doesn't think the year could get any worse. But Frances was wrong... The school is turned completely upside down when Caroline is found dead the following morning! When old-fashioned Detective Barry Hughes is brought in to uncover the incident and rules it as unsuspicious, Frances gets investigating. Especially when she was the last person to see Caroline alive... Whilst investigating, Frances encounters the different characters at the school and their motives, collecting clues along the way with a little help from police side kick Jonathan Birch, all the while having Detective Barry breathing down her neck as his main suspect! Will Frances manage to crack the case, or will the academy assassination remain unsolved?
Autorenporträt
Dr Hannah Jones is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Warwick. She writes, researches and teaches on racism, belonging and migration, and on critical public sociology. She is lead co-author of Go Home? The politics of immigration controversies (2017), co-editor of Stories of Cosmopolitan Belonging: Emotion and Location (2014), and author of Negotiating Cohesion, Inequality and Change: Uncomfortable Positions in Local Government (2013) winner of the BSA Phillip Abrams Prize for best first book in UK sociology.