The Private Patient

by P.D. James
The Private Patient
book data
811 ratings, 3.62 average rating, 276 reviews (more data...)
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published
November 18th 2008 by Knopf

binding
Hardcover, 352 pages

isbn
0307270777    (isbn13: 9780307270771)

description

Cheverell Manor is a lovely old house in deepest Dorset, now a private clinic belonging to the famous plastic surgeon George Chandler-Powell. When inv

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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1,199)

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Sally906
bookshelves: mystery, review-book
Opening Sentence: "...On November the 21st, the day of her forty-seventh birthday, and three weeks and two days before she was murdered, Rhoda Gradwyn went to Harley Street to keep a first appointment with her plastic surgeon,and there in a consulting room designed,so it appeared, to inspire confidence and allay apprehension, made the decision that would lead inexorably to her death..."

I am a PD James fan from way back. So when I opened this book I expected three things. Fi...more
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Dorothy
bookshelves: modern-day-mysteries
Read in January, 2009
When you pick up a P.D. James mystery, you know that you are in the hands of a professional. Cleanly plotted, meticulously detailed, characters revealed layer by layer, hers are the epitome of the "British mysteries" in the tradition of the great Agatha. It is a tradition that I know and love.

"The Private Patient" is her latest entry in the saga of Commander Adam Dalgliesh of New Scotland Yard. It is a police procedural with, as usual, James' touch of humanism....more
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Rebecca
Read in November, 2008
recommends it for: Anyone who loves a great mystery.
I have been a fan of PD James forever and was sure that with her age, The Ligththouse would be her last Dagliesh novel. I was so happy to see that she had another story in her. I rated this 4 stars as much because I love James and her wonderful language. However, I didn't feel that it was her best book. I sensed that she needed to tie up a bunch of loose ends for her characters. Still, on a scale of 1 to 10, if PD James wrote a book that was not her best, it is still an 9 compared to other ...more
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Shane
04/14/09
Shane rated it: 3 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0571242448)

Read in April, 2009
I decided to read a detective genre fiction book after a long time. An investigative reporter checks into a private clinic to have a scar removed and is murdered - it sounded like a good premise to work from.

I have to credit James, almost ninety, with continuing to write competent police procedural books which peep into the lives of her suspects, criminals and detectives. And yet, I found several aspects that grated on me: the intruding concern for plot summations at various points ...more
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Jessica
bookshelves: mysteries
Read in December, 2008
There's a reason P.D. James is a master of the well-worn English mystery genre, and The Private Patient is a good example of why. Superficially, this could come straight from Agatha Christie land -- a muckraking journalist checks into a country manor house that has been purchased by a plastic surgeon from the family that could no longer afford to run it for use as a luxury cosmetic surgery clinic, and is murdered the night of her operation. It soon is revealed that many members of the household ...more
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Ed
11/28/08
Ed rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0571242448)

Of the three great post-modern talismans--race, gender, class--P.D. James has chosen class as the ongoing theme of her books, inteweaving discussions of the fine (or not so fine) distinctions shown by accent, birthplace and school into her terrific mysteries.

"The Pivate Patient" has been hoped for by her fans almost since the publication of "The Lighthouse", published in 2006, hit the shelves. James was 80 years old when she finished that one and we didn't know h...more
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Nette
12/12/08
Nette rated it: 3 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0571242448)

Read in December, 2008
I found this to be so leisurely -- pages-long descriptions of car trips through the countryside, detailed listings of the stuff in every room -- that I had to force myself to finish. But I'm giving it 3 stars because for God's sake, this woman is 88 YEARS OLD. I can barely find my car keys and she's still cranking out byzantine mystery plots.
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Dana Stabenow
Read in November, 2008
recommended to Dana by: Barbara Peters of the Poisoned Pen
recommends it for: People who appreciate good writing.
I wrote this review for the Poisoned Pen's eNews:

What could be more English than a country house murder? In The Private Patient P.D. James summons up the shades of Conan Coyle and Agatha Christie in murder most foul of a patient at a stately country manor turned medical clinic. Means, motive and opportunity are all on offer for everyone on the premises, from the self-absorbed doctor, the idealistic assistant, the lovelorn nurse, the dispossessed heir and the devoted nanny to the ov...more
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Nat
12/29/08
Nat rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0571242448)

I guess I'm channeling my mother (who died last year). She was an English teacher who loved to read P. D. James' mysteries. When I saw this on the shelf at Borders, I thought of her and bought it. Now I see why she enjoyed reading James' works. She is an excellent writer, rich and visual. Next time I read one of her books I will keep a dictionary at my side. What a fine way to increase my vocabulary! Of all the current murder/mystery writers active today, James is probably the best WRITER...more
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caitlin Richards
Read in February, 2009
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Migdalia
Read in December, 2008
recommends it for: to fans of mystery and great writing
I cannot get a PD James Dalgliesh book without becoming totally addicted to it. I am never bored. I am never without anticipation and questions, and I am always heartened at the fact that the investigators have the same questions I have or are filled with the same curiosity. I will leave the plot summaries for the book covers and B&N website. It's enough to say that it's a typical PD James book: of the highest quality.
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Linda
12/05/08
Linda rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0571242448)

Read in December, 2008
recommends it for: people who like PD James
I always enjoy this series, but I didn't think it was her best. The plot seemed a bit convoluted and while she tied a lot of personal ends up (for the characters), the actual mystery wasn't entirely neat. I suspect this may be the last in the series, although she doesn't specificaly say that.
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Mary
01/06/09
Mary rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0571242448)

Read in December, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Elisha (Lishie)
07/30/08
Elisha (Lishie) rated it: 3 of 5 stars

bookshelves: mystery-fiction
Read in January, 2009
Not James' best but still James! I liked the way she ended this novel. I did feel some of the extra information within the mystery was too much/padded. Also, Commander Dagliesh's life outside of the actual case felt disjointed but I still enjoyed the book overall.

Maybe it's me, but I felt like James' was "tidying" up the mainstay Dagliesh characters' stories to have somewhat of an end in case...
I also thought she was reflecting on death in the story (besides the actua...more
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Amy
11/18/08
Amy rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0571242448)

Read in November, 2008
Very consistent with the other Dalgliesh novels - I had to read this one a bit more slowly than usual because the author has taken a lot of time with her use of language. I will likely read this one again because the writing was so lovely and evocative.
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Missmath144
bookshelves: murder, mystery
Read in February, 2009
recommends it for: mystery lovers
Adam Dalgliesh returns to solve the murder of Rhoda, an investigative reporter who goes to a lovely private clinic in the country to have an ugly scar removed from her face, a scar her drunken father inflicted upon her as a child and of which she said, "I no longer have need of it."

As usual with P.D. James, the book is beautifully written. What I don't recall in her previous novels are the occasional social commentaries. At 88 years of age, I guess she's ready to comment on...more
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Peg
01/19/09
Peg rated it: 4 of 5 stars

Read in January, 2009
Some mystery writers, like some main-stream novelists, get off to a slow start. By the time they have established the setting and introduced the characters, the reader is starting to mutter, "OK, OK, get on with it." Not so with P.D. James. How's this for an opening sentence? "On November the 21st, the day of her forty-seventh birthday, and three weeks and two days before she was murdered, Rhoda Gradwyn went to Harley Street to keep a first appointment with her plastic surge...more
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Diane
01/07/09
Diane rated it: 4 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0571242448)

Read in January, 2009
P. D. James is now in her 80s, yet she still continues to send Adam Dalgliesh out to solve murders. Dalgliesh, a detective who also writes poetry, is a dark and moody character, someone who, as an infant, survived the Blitz of London, even though his mother did not. It has occurred to me that Dalgliesh must be getting on in years, unless James has set her novels twenty years ago. In this novel, maybe feeling his years, Dalgliesh has decided it's time to settle down, quit the detective business, ...more
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Daisy
01/05/09
Daisy rated it: 2 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0571242448)

Read in December, 2008
I only seem to update when I didn't really like a book, but maybe I just want to warn everyone. James started out as such a compelling mystery writer and her prose is still good, but her books have become more and more tedious over time. She's become, I think, far too enamored of her own regular characters and too much of the writing is focused, not only their thoughts and feelings, but of the minutia of their actions. I think it was almost page 200 before we read about an interview with a su...more
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Kayeb
05/04/09
Kayeb rated it: 5 of 5 stars (review of isbn 0571242448)

Read in May, 2009
I continue to like PD James a great deal. Adam Dalgliesh is also engaged now which is a small side bar.....most of the story takes place away from home. Kate is here again, still providing the role as sidekick, who is also quietly in love with Dalgliesth. They don't come into the book until well into it.....there are multiple chapters setting the stage for the murder first, and I truly don't recall is that has been the case to this extent in her previous works. It seems to me thatt the team...more
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The Private Patient (Adam Dalgliesh Mystery)
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The Private Patient (Paperback)
The Private Patient (Hardcover)
The Private Patient (Audio CD)








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