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The Devil's Banquet

The Piccadilly Noir Series

Paperback
5.15"W x 7.79"H x 1.03"D   | 11 oz | 48 per carton
On sale Jul 07, 2026 | 416 Pages | 9781835417317
FOC Apr 27, 2026 | Catalog March 2026

The second novel in the Piccadilly Noir series, this dark historical thriller sees Cockney private eye George Harley return to the streets of London’s Soho, populated by gangsters, wide-boys and lowlifes, to investigate a missing cabaret dancer. For fans of Dominic Nolan and Laura Shepherd Robinson.

It is 1933, four years after Cockney private eye George Harley brought the infamous child-killer the ‘Nursery Butcher’ to justice, and he’s back in business operating a new detective agency in Soho. For their first case, Harley and his new assistant Bunty are engaged to find a young girl who has run away from home to join a cabaret troupe led by the notorious ‘Queen of Depravity’ Ilse Blau.

But in Harley’s liminal world, things are never straightforward, and the detective soon finds himself embroiled in another pitch-dark scenario, with London’s decadent, thrill-seeking gentry on one side and West End mobsters and wide-boys in search of easy cash on the other.

Returning to London’s frowzy alleyways and sleazy nightclubs, Harley will hunt down answers – no matter how uncomfortable they might turn out to be. But when he becomes ensnared in the mind games of a wily femme fatale, and finds himself up against ruthless Glaswegian gangsters, well-connected occultists, and undercover SS agents, those answers become increasingly hard to find.
Phil Lecomber was born in 1965 in Slade Green, on the outskirts of south-east London. He has been married to his wife, Susie, for thirty-six years, and they have two adult children. Now living in Bath, he spent most of his working life in the capital. His career has included work as a musician in the city’s clubs and pubs, a steel-fixer on the towering edifices of the Square Mile, and a designer of stained-glass windows. For thirty-five years he worked in Mayfair at the internationally renowned auction house Sotheby’s, overseeing electronic security for some of the world’s most valuable works of art.
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"A pacy thriller, pulsing with adventure, packed with glitz and sleaze. Phil Lecomber certainly knows how to spin a compulsive yarn."
Tom Mead, bestselling author of Death and the Conjuror

“A dark, atmospheric read evoking a wild and glamorous 1930s London. Rich in historical detail and peppered with vividly racy slang, The Devil’s Banquet is a deliciously sumptuous feast.”
Russ Thomas, author of the DS Adam Tyler series



“An esoteric distillation of seedy 1930s Soho into a blood-curdling, complex mystery.”
Greg Mosse, author of the French Village Mysteries


"Phil Lecomber creates a 1933 Soho that really gets under your skin. Between the winding alleyways and dingy nightclubs is a world that’s dark, mysterious and dangerous. A brilliant piece of pitch black noir with perfectly executed twists and reveals. A cockney detective, a cannibal cult and Hitler's secret service – there’s a lot packed into this novel, but in Lecomber's hands it's utterly compelling."
Jamie West, author of Death on the Pier


"This gripping noir mystery conjures up a dark 1920s underworld with wit and pace - you’ll be rooting for detective George Harley."
Jo Cunningham, author of Death by Numbers


"Grub’s up! Lecomber serves macabre morsels and sinful snacks at the Devil’s Banquet with a side of pacy plotting. Cosy this ain’t, tuck in."
Robert Holtom, author of A Queer Case


"Nobody else writes interwar London quite like Phil Lecomber. With decapitated showgirls, esoteric cults, and ruthless Nazi agents, all against a backdrop of seedy Soho, the second entry in the Piccadilly Noir series packs as much of a punch as cynical hero George Harley."
Stuart Douglas, author of Death at the Dress Rehearsal


"The Devil's Banquet is fantastic. Beautifully written - no-one has as good a grasp of the language of the era or the milieu as Phil - and genuinely gripping, with great characterisation. Phil Lecomber really pulled the rug out from under my feet at the end and I can’t wait for the next one in the series."
Ajay Chowdhury, author of The Waiter


"The Devil’s Banquet is a brilliant title — I wish I’d thought of it. Phil Lecomber’s thriller is well researched, with deft period detail and a dark sense of humour. Add that to a good ear for dialogue and a knack for vivid characterisation and you have a winning combination."
Andrew Cartmel, author of the Vinyl Detective series




Praise for Midnight Streets


‘A walk on the wild side of 1920s London. Dark, atmospheric and utterly compelling.’
Jake Arnott, bestselling author of The Long Firm and The Fatal Tree


‘It’s 1929. While Sam Spade is busy chasing a black bird through the mean streets of San Francisco, war vet and private sherlock George Harley is following the bloody trail of a book of the damned through the streets of Jazz Age London. Phil Lecomber’s jaw-dropping debut is exactly what I want from a historical hardboiled novel: passionate nihilism and a tough-as-nails loner making his way through a depraved underworld whose darkness goes all the way down. Actually, I’m lying. I didn’t know that’s what I wanted until Lecomber served it up to me in Midnight Streets, and I very much hope he has more in store for us.”
Duane Swierczynski, New York Times bestselling author of Lion & Lamb, California Bear and Secret Dead Men


'I loved this fast-paced, atmospheric adventure through the smoke and neon of 1920s Soho, vividly written and rich with historical detail. The twists and turns will leave you reeling.'
Alex Pavesi, bestselling author of Eight Detectives


‘If Patrick Hamilton and Dashiell Hammett had got hammered in some boozer in old Soho, Midnight Streets is the novel they’d have come up with. Dodging razor-wielding gangsters, ponces, streetwalkers and bent coppers, cockney private eye George Harley armed only with his wits and a pair of knuckledusters, navigates his way through a pitch-black noir cityscape. All of London (low) life is here. A cracking debut.’
Martyn Waites, author of the Joe Donovan crime series


'A polished story set in a vibrant and colourful London between the wars. Full of twists, it gradually unveils a horrific set of crimes. The dogged George Harley will appeal to anyone who loves a private detective story.'
Mick Finlay, author of the Arrowood Mysteries series


‘A gripping mystery, steeped in the deliciously seedy side of the Golden Age crime.’
Lucy Barker, author of The Other Side of Mrs Wood


'A clever mix of Silence of the Lambs and Dennis Wheatley, all set in the dark and dangerous world of Jazz Age Soho.'
Stuart Douglas, author of Death at the Dress Rehearsal and Death at the Playhouses


'Absolutely terrific - incredibly gripping… brought the seamy streets and seamier denizens of 1920s London to brutal life.'
Ajay Chowdhury, author of The Waiter and The Cook


‘Set in London in 1929 – prime Golden Age territory – Midnight Streets is as dark as any noir classic. In this book, evil has its gloves, and its monocle, off, and we see the darkness we knew was there.’
S. J. Rozan, co-author of the Judge Dee and Lao She mysteries


‘An atmospheric thriller set in 1920s London, which reveals Lecomber’s keen ear for the off-beat rhythms of the city. Midnight Streets burrows into the darker facets of the glittering Golden Age, with a cast of shadowy characters dragged from the back alleys. Immersive and mysterious, this debut will delight historical crime fans.’
Jo Furniss, author of Dead Mile


‘It’s dark, it’s gory, evoking an earlier time of the penny dreadfuls, that traded on the ability to shock, added to which is a real feel for the macabre and the grotesque… Midnight Streets is a magnificent period noir that is steeped in the atmosphere of London and a touch of the classic hardboiled.’
Peter Turns the Page blog








Praise for Phil Lecomber's self-published debut The Mask of Verdoy


“The smoky and smoggy atmosphere of 1930s London is captured beautifully… an excellent debut.” – Crime Fiction Lover


“Readers will practically see the city’s pea-soup smog and smell Harley’s ubiquitous Gold Flake cigarettes wafting off the page… An engrossing historical murder mystery.” – Kirkus Reviews


“An enthralling tale of murder and manipulation that’ll place you in 1930s London.” – Crime Thriller Hound

About

The second novel in the Piccadilly Noir series, this dark historical thriller sees Cockney private eye George Harley return to the streets of London’s Soho, populated by gangsters, wide-boys and lowlifes, to investigate a missing cabaret dancer. For fans of Dominic Nolan and Laura Shepherd Robinson.

It is 1933, four years after Cockney private eye George Harley brought the infamous child-killer the ‘Nursery Butcher’ to justice, and he’s back in business operating a new detective agency in Soho. For their first case, Harley and his new assistant Bunty are engaged to find a young girl who has run away from home to join a cabaret troupe led by the notorious ‘Queen of Depravity’ Ilse Blau.

But in Harley’s liminal world, things are never straightforward, and the detective soon finds himself embroiled in another pitch-dark scenario, with London’s decadent, thrill-seeking gentry on one side and West End mobsters and wide-boys in search of easy cash on the other.

Returning to London’s frowzy alleyways and sleazy nightclubs, Harley will hunt down answers – no matter how uncomfortable they might turn out to be. But when he becomes ensnared in the mind games of a wily femme fatale, and finds himself up against ruthless Glaswegian gangsters, well-connected occultists, and undercover SS agents, those answers become increasingly hard to find.

Creators

Phil Lecomber was born in 1965 in Slade Green, on the outskirts of south-east London. He has been married to his wife, Susie, for thirty-six years, and they have two adult children. Now living in Bath, he spent most of his working life in the capital. His career has included work as a musician in the city’s clubs and pubs, a steel-fixer on the towering edifices of the Square Mile, and a designer of stained-glass windows. For thirty-five years he worked in Mayfair at the internationally renowned auction house Sotheby’s, overseeing electronic security for some of the world’s most valuable works of art.

Praise

"A pacy thriller, pulsing with adventure, packed with glitz and sleaze. Phil Lecomber certainly knows how to spin a compulsive yarn."
Tom Mead, bestselling author of Death and the Conjuror

“A dark, atmospheric read evoking a wild and glamorous 1930s London. Rich in historical detail and peppered with vividly racy slang, The Devil’s Banquet is a deliciously sumptuous feast.”
Russ Thomas, author of the DS Adam Tyler series



“An esoteric distillation of seedy 1930s Soho into a blood-curdling, complex mystery.”
Greg Mosse, author of the French Village Mysteries


"Phil Lecomber creates a 1933 Soho that really gets under your skin. Between the winding alleyways and dingy nightclubs is a world that’s dark, mysterious and dangerous. A brilliant piece of pitch black noir with perfectly executed twists and reveals. A cockney detective, a cannibal cult and Hitler's secret service – there’s a lot packed into this novel, but in Lecomber's hands it's utterly compelling."
Jamie West, author of Death on the Pier


"This gripping noir mystery conjures up a dark 1920s underworld with wit and pace - you’ll be rooting for detective George Harley."
Jo Cunningham, author of Death by Numbers


"Grub’s up! Lecomber serves macabre morsels and sinful snacks at the Devil’s Banquet with a side of pacy plotting. Cosy this ain’t, tuck in."
Robert Holtom, author of A Queer Case


"Nobody else writes interwar London quite like Phil Lecomber. With decapitated showgirls, esoteric cults, and ruthless Nazi agents, all against a backdrop of seedy Soho, the second entry in the Piccadilly Noir series packs as much of a punch as cynical hero George Harley."
Stuart Douglas, author of Death at the Dress Rehearsal


"The Devil's Banquet is fantastic. Beautifully written - no-one has as good a grasp of the language of the era or the milieu as Phil - and genuinely gripping, with great characterisation. Phil Lecomber really pulled the rug out from under my feet at the end and I can’t wait for the next one in the series."
Ajay Chowdhury, author of The Waiter


"The Devil’s Banquet is a brilliant title — I wish I’d thought of it. Phil Lecomber’s thriller is well researched, with deft period detail and a dark sense of humour. Add that to a good ear for dialogue and a knack for vivid characterisation and you have a winning combination."
Andrew Cartmel, author of the Vinyl Detective series




Praise for Midnight Streets


‘A walk on the wild side of 1920s London. Dark, atmospheric and utterly compelling.’
Jake Arnott, bestselling author of The Long Firm and The Fatal Tree


‘It’s 1929. While Sam Spade is busy chasing a black bird through the mean streets of San Francisco, war vet and private sherlock George Harley is following the bloody trail of a book of the damned through the streets of Jazz Age London. Phil Lecomber’s jaw-dropping debut is exactly what I want from a historical hardboiled novel: passionate nihilism and a tough-as-nails loner making his way through a depraved underworld whose darkness goes all the way down. Actually, I’m lying. I didn’t know that’s what I wanted until Lecomber served it up to me in Midnight Streets, and I very much hope he has more in store for us.”
Duane Swierczynski, New York Times bestselling author of Lion & Lamb, California Bear and Secret Dead Men


'I loved this fast-paced, atmospheric adventure through the smoke and neon of 1920s Soho, vividly written and rich with historical detail. The twists and turns will leave you reeling.'
Alex Pavesi, bestselling author of Eight Detectives


‘If Patrick Hamilton and Dashiell Hammett had got hammered in some boozer in old Soho, Midnight Streets is the novel they’d have come up with. Dodging razor-wielding gangsters, ponces, streetwalkers and bent coppers, cockney private eye George Harley armed only with his wits and a pair of knuckledusters, navigates his way through a pitch-black noir cityscape. All of London (low) life is here. A cracking debut.’
Martyn Waites, author of the Joe Donovan crime series


'A polished story set in a vibrant and colourful London between the wars. Full of twists, it gradually unveils a horrific set of crimes. The dogged George Harley will appeal to anyone who loves a private detective story.'
Mick Finlay, author of the Arrowood Mysteries series


‘A gripping mystery, steeped in the deliciously seedy side of the Golden Age crime.’
Lucy Barker, author of The Other Side of Mrs Wood


'A clever mix of Silence of the Lambs and Dennis Wheatley, all set in the dark and dangerous world of Jazz Age Soho.'
Stuart Douglas, author of Death at the Dress Rehearsal and Death at the Playhouses


'Absolutely terrific - incredibly gripping… brought the seamy streets and seamier denizens of 1920s London to brutal life.'
Ajay Chowdhury, author of The Waiter and The Cook


‘Set in London in 1929 – prime Golden Age territory – Midnight Streets is as dark as any noir classic. In this book, evil has its gloves, and its monocle, off, and we see the darkness we knew was there.’
S. J. Rozan, co-author of the Judge Dee and Lao She mysteries


‘An atmospheric thriller set in 1920s London, which reveals Lecomber’s keen ear for the off-beat rhythms of the city. Midnight Streets burrows into the darker facets of the glittering Golden Age, with a cast of shadowy characters dragged from the back alleys. Immersive and mysterious, this debut will delight historical crime fans.’
Jo Furniss, author of Dead Mile


‘It’s dark, it’s gory, evoking an earlier time of the penny dreadfuls, that traded on the ability to shock, added to which is a real feel for the macabre and the grotesque… Midnight Streets is a magnificent period noir that is steeped in the atmosphere of London and a touch of the classic hardboiled.’
Peter Turns the Page blog








Praise for Phil Lecomber's self-published debut The Mask of Verdoy


“The smoky and smoggy atmosphere of 1930s London is captured beautifully… an excellent debut.” – Crime Fiction Lover


“Readers will practically see the city’s pea-soup smog and smell Harley’s ubiquitous Gold Flake cigarettes wafting off the page… An engrossing historical murder mystery.” – Kirkus Reviews


“An enthralling tale of murder and manipulation that’ll place you in 1930s London.” – Crime Thriller Hound
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