"1837 - 1901" . . "1800 - 1899" . . "Elections Corrupt practices England Fiction." . . "Murder Investigation Fiction." . . "Murder." . . "Scandals Fiction." . . "England." . . "Murder Investigation." . . "Legal stories." . . "Great Britain" . . "Great Britain." . "Elections Corrupt practices." . . "Murder Fiction." . . "Historical fiction"@en . "Historical fiction" . . . "Mystery fiction"@en . "Mystery fiction" . "Fiction"@en . "Fiction" . . . . "Political fiction"@en . . . . . . . . . . "Audiobooks"@en . . . "Breaths of suspicion"@en . "Breaths of suspicion" . . . . "As his rise in the legal profession accelerates, Edwin James seeks to further enhance his prospects by obtaining a seat in Parliament. However, James finds that he must first act as an election agent in what is quickly seen as the most corrupt election in mid-Victorian England. In spite of powerful backing of senior politicians, including Prime Minister Lord Palmerston, he finds himself still dogged by old scandals and unforgiving enemies. Burdened by increasing debt, James is suspected of being involved in the mysterious death of Lord George Bentinck, and the apparent suicide of the swindler of the day, banker John Sadleir." . . . "As his rise in the legal profession accelerates, Edwin James seeks to further enhance his prospects by obtaining a seat in Parliament. However, James finds that he must first act as an election agent in what is quickly seen as the most corrupt election in mid-Victorian England." . "History"@en . "History" . . "Crime"@en . . . . . . "As his rise in the legal profession accelerates, Edwin James seeks to further enhance his prospects by obtaining a seat in Parliament. However, James finds that he must first act as an election agent in what is quickly seen as the most corrupt election in mid-Victorian England. In spite of the powerful backing of senior politicians, including Prime Minister Lord Palmerston, he finds himself still dogged by old scandals and unforgiving enemies. Burdened by increasing debt, James is suspected of being involved in the mysterious death of Lord George Bentinck, and the apparent suicide of the greatest swindler of the day, banker John Sadleir."@en . . "Detective and mystery stories"@en . "Scandals." . . . .