Matthew Hawkwood



"You don't send a gentleman to catch vermin. You send Hawkwood."

Matthew Hawkwood is the hero of a series of historical mystery novels by James McGee.

The Hawkwood novels historical novels are set during the Regency period, when Britain was at war with Napoleon. The hero, Matthew Hawkwood, is working as a Bow Street Runner, an early investigative officer working out of London's Bow Street Magistrates' Court. He is called upon to solve a number of civil crimes, including murder, body-snatching and highway robbery, but his previous military experience makes him ably suited to investigate issues of national security.

Hawkwood has a complicated back-story, which is touched upon at various stages of the novels. He once served as an officer in the 95th Rifles, but was cashiered after he killed a fellow officer in a duel. With Wellington's intervention he was spared a court-martial, and instead joined the Spanish Guerrilleros, liaising with the British intelligence officer Colquhoun Grant. It is Grant's influence that enables Hawkwood to get a job at Bow Street on his return to England.

McGee's creation of Hawkwood's past was deliberate, as he wanted a hero who was "at home in both the military and criminal worlds".

Much of the action within the novels is inspired by historical events. The plot of Ratcatcher centres around the secret development of the first submarines by American Robert Fulton, then working for the French. Resurrectionist is darker, reflecting the underworld of "resurrectionists" who stole bodies to supply the anatomy schools of London, and the experimentation of early (and illegal) organ transplant and resuscitation. Rapscallion focuses on French prisoners-of-war upon the prison hulks.

As of 2022, there were six novels in the Matthew Hawkwood series:


 * Ratcatcher (2006)
 * Resurrectionist (2007)
 * Rapscallion (2008)
 * Rebellion (2011)
 * The Blooding (2014)
 * The Reckoning (2017)


 * Badass Longcoat: Hawkwood frequently wears a long riding coat, even when not on horseback.
 * The City Narrows: Jack Ketch's Warren, the neighbourhood that Jago calls home.
 * Combat Pragmatist; Pretty much everyone. Hawkwood himself seems particularly enamored of the Groin Attack.
 * Cowboy Cop: Hawkwood
 * Da Chief: Chief Magistrate James Read
 * Handicapped Badass: Colonel Lomax
 * Regency England
 * Shown Their Work

Tropes specific to Ratcatcher

 * The Highwayman: Ratcatcher opens with a pair of highwaymen robbing a coach and killing a naval messenger.
 * Scar Survey: Catherine conducts one on Hawkwood in Ratcatcher.
 * Seductive Spy:  in Ratcatcher
 * Sub Story: Ratcatcher
 * Ten Paces and Turn: Hawkwood fights a traditional pistol duel at dawn in Ratcatcher.

Tropes specific to Resurrectionist

 * Bedlam House: Bethlem Royal, the original Bedlam, features prominently in Resurrectionist in all its hellish glory. The place creeps Hawkwood out.
 * Disposable Sex Worker: Molly Finn in Resurrectionist.
 * Final Battle: Several tropes related to this pop up in Resurrectionist, and all of them are justified.
 * Honor Before Reason:
 * Leave Him to Me:
 * Why Don't You Just Shoot Him?:
 * Freakier Than Fiction: McGee mentions in the afterword of Resurrectionist that he decided to leave certain elements of the story out, lest he be accused of making stuff up. Specifically, people taking preserved loved ones and placing them in their bedrooms or living rooms.
 * Grave Robbing: Resurrectionist
 * It Will Never Catch On: In Resurrectionist, Hyde makes several remarkably correct predictions about the future of medicine, forseeing such things as organ transplants.
 * Mad Doctor: Colonel Titus Hyde in Resurrectionist
 * Pocket Protector: The tipstaff Hawkwood was carrying in his coat turns aside a sword blade in Resurrectionist.
 * Sword Cane: Colonel Hyde wields one to lethal effect in Resurrectionist.

Tropes specific to Rapscallion

 * Bodybag Trick: This is how Hawkwood and Lassuer are smuggled off the prison hulk in Rapscallion.
 * Death by Materialism: In Rapscallion,
 * Evil Albino: Matisse in Rapscallion.
 * A Handful for an Eye: Hawkwood pulls this trick during his duel against the Marmeluke in Rapscallion.
 * Hellhole Prison: The hulks in Rapscallion.
 * Locking MacGyver in the Store Cupboard: In Rapscallion,
 * Pet the Dog: When we first meet Rapscallion's Morgan, he's helping to deliver a foal. He also has two actual dogs.
 * Prison Ship: The hulks in Rapscallion.
 * Pursued Protagonist: The prologue to novel Rapscallion features Lieutenant Sark being chased through the marshes by unknown pursuers with dogs. He does not survive the experience.
 * There Are No Rules: Matisse says this when Hawkwood asks what the rules are for the duel in Rapscallion.
 * They Have the Scent: Hawkwood and Lassuer are hunted using dogs in Rapscallion.