DISCOVER YOUR NEXT FAVOURITE SERIES. MEET BRITAIN’S BEST-LOVED VILLAGE POLICEMAN.“It’s original, it’s funny . . . one of life’s little pleasures.” Yorkshire Post THE BOOKS WHICH INSPIRED HEARTBEAT The brilliantly entertaining and heartwarming books behind the hit 90s TV series Heartbeat. One of the top ten most watched shows of the decade.CONSTABLE NICK IS ON NIGHT DUTY Nick is still settling into his role at the Ashfordly Section police station, and he’s drawn the short night duty. Alone in the midnight hours with nothing but dead leaves, stray cats and legends of ghosts and ghoulies to accompany him. A sleeping village doesn’t mean a simple shift, though. Between the early risers of the farming community, a badger with a sweet tooth, and getting to know his new workmates, there’s no time for Nick to kick his feet up in the station. THE VILLAGE IS ASLEEP BUT THE WRONG-DOERS AREN’T And of course there’s Claude Jeremiah Greengrass! Why did he have to retreat hastily down a ladder from a lady's bedroom and what happened to his trousers and shirt? And can he really be innocent of taking a deer during the night, when he was seen emerging from the forest carrying a particularly fine set of antlers? “Stories of a constable on his village beat in North Yorkshire. All very gentle and far, far removed from the hurly burly of modern day city policing.” Daily Telegraph In the beautiful North Yorkshire countryside of the 1960s, Constable Nick's roles are as varied as the eccentric villagers. IT’S NOT THE BIG CITY BUT THE YORKSHIRE COUNTRYSIDE IS STILL FULL OF INCIDENTPerfect for fans of James Herriot, T.E. Kinsey, Gerald Durrell, J.R. Ellis or anyone who loves a great read.CONSTABLE NICK’S COLLEAGUESSergeant Oscar Blaketon. A good, solid and dependable character who runs his little police station with fierce efficiency but under a tough exterior, is full of warmth, generosity and kindness PC Alf Ventress. The old, easy-going constable whose local knowledge is vital to the running of Ashfordly Police Station. He does like Mrs Ventress's hard-boiled eggs! WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING ABOUT NICHOLAS RHEA “Just love Nicholas Rhea's Constable books. . . easy reading delivers a heart-warming, amusing trip back to a very different kind of policing in the '60s.” Joy Ellis “Recommended if it's laughter you're after.” Bolton Evening News “Richly entertaining.” Yorkshire Evening Post “Splendid reading.” Police Journal “I enjoyed this tremendously.” Melissa “A wonderful and relaxing dip into the beautiful North Yorkshire Moors.” David “A highly entertaining book which anyone who is looking for easy and humorous reading will enjoy.
Constable on the Prowl by Nicholas Rhea reads more like a memoir than a novel.
It is, for the most part, entertaining. It is written in sections, each dealing with a different aspect of being a Constable on night duty. If, like me, you are a fan of Heartbeat, you will enjoy the tales involving Alf Ventriss, or Vesuvius as he is nicknamed, Sargeant Blaketon and that enchanting villian Claude Jeremiah Greengrass.
Stories of practical jokes played on one another and the lengths to which they would go to get a bit of rest and avoid detection by the Superintendent make for an entertaining read.
Thank you to Endeavour Press via Netgalley for providing a digital copy of Constable on the Prowl by Nicholas Rhea for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own.
#24in48 I do love Heartbeat and the books the show took its premise from, Peter Walker’s/Nicholas Rhea’s Constable series. The setting, rural Yorkshire, and the memoir style of the writing leaves me reminiscing for the time in which I was born but didn’t get to experience in a locale that I want to live in. Some of the themes/stories in this book, the second in the series, would be considered quite disturbing by today’s standards so a little warning if you are interested in starting this series. Otherwise another very enjoyable outing to Aidensfield and the surrounding county. 3⭐️’s
I am an old lady with sufficient health problems to make me a good target for this delightful pandemic. My family doesn't want me to go out. While they wear gloves and homemade masks, with determination to provide for this large family, and I am inside all the time reading. I'm reading of a kind and good man who serves and protects with humor, and and chooses, always, to do what is right. I'm going to read the whole series and feel good for that. I'm praying for the good health and well being of the whole world. Be advised that I love you all.
Entertaining quick read with a great setting in a small village in Yorkshire and an enterprising young cop. It's a good thing for all of us that Nick has a sense of humor. thanks to Netgalley for the ARC. You will like this if you are interested in novels which are less gruesome and gory and more character based - you can read it in an evening and be pleased.
It's certainly interesting to see how different laws were compared to how they are now. I like the short stories, it makes the book easy to pick up again.
I love these books. I was originally drawn to them because the guy's last name is Rhea, which is my maiden name but the books are just so different. Reading one reminds me of watching an episode of Seinfeld...they're about nothing!!! The main character is Officer Nick Rhea who is a policeman at Ashfordly Section police station in Yorkshire. This particular book contained lots of little entertaining bits about working the night shift for the police department and runs through topics like the midnight meal break at the police station, burglary, creatures spotted after dark, paranormal activity and trysts that may or not need to be interrupted in the middle of the night. Just some great situations that make the reader laugh.
In this second Constable Nick book he takes us along while working the night shift. One may think the Yorkshire countryside after dark would be quiet and peaceful. But the Constable proves otherwise as he shares tales of dealing with fires, catching poachers, finding couples in compromising positions all the while patrolling on a bicycle. There are heartwarming chapters in which Nick is able to observe animals and nature up close in the still of the night. Other chapters detail pranks officers play on one another in an effort to stay awake or just because they can. Some of them work and some backfire for equally funny results.
I didn't finish this one--I still liked the writing, but a large part of the book seemed to be about the pranks that the officers on night shift played on one another, and that got too mean-spirited for me to want to continue reading. There was one particular officer other oficers liked to prank who blamed his wife for a specific prank that got pulled on him again and again. It turns out that he knew what was going on, so maybe he didn't really go home and yell at his wife every time but only said he did, but I still found it to be a downer.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
In this book Nicholas Rhea recounts stories from when he was on night duty. We also meet Alf Ventress for the first time, learn about Claude Jeremiah Greengrass and deer horns and discover some of the tricks officers played on each other. This second Constable Nick book is a delight and captures what it was like to be a policeman on night duty in the 60's. Highly recommended if you loved watching Heartbeat on the television.
Seemed increasingly as though it was teetering on the verge of fiction. When I read book #1 ("Constable on the Hill"), I never doubted that what I was reading actually happened to the author more or less as it was written. However, with this book, it just seemed as though the fabric of reality was being tugged a bit on the corners here and there. Still quite an enjoyable read, however, and I do intend to continue with the series.
After sheer delight at the first book in this series, I was deeply disappointed with this offering. Much of it contains what appears to be content from a police training manual used as page filling. I imagine that this is an attempt to capitalise on the first book's success. I only hope that future offerings contain many of this talented author's amusing anecdotes.
This is a one-day read, but if you like it as much as I do, you’ll discover there are over 35 more books in the series. I will be reading them all. There’s information about an earlier time and a rural location in Yorkshire. There’s some laughs. There’s some tender moments. I am sold on the Constable.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. It is highly entertaining and definitely worth reading. The perfect read for a lazy afternoon on the sofa. Highly recommended for anyone who enjoys reading a book that has no crime, no violence, no one getting shot or murdered.
A pleasant, heart-warming account of Constable Nick making his night rounds in the villages and countryside of Yorkshire. Independent chapters so you can pick it up, read one light episode, and then put it down for later.
This is such a pleasant way to experience England and their culture. My father was a true English man and he fit picture so well. Someday I would like to go there.
Second in the series of titles autobiographical ventures of Nicholas Rhea a bobby in Yorkshire which was made into the series Heartbeat on TV. This is another excellent book which I enjoyed greatly and highly recommend. The narrator, the actor Phillip Franks, is excellent
Parts of the book are interesting but becomes a little repetitive, I don’t know how the series can continue for so many books because the author doesn’t seem to have a lot to say apart from the occasional funny anecdote.
You can tell that a man wrote this book. I find some of the comments and treatment of women in this book revolting. There were times that how the author shows how the bobby's (police) viewed women which shows how men objectify woman.
Very entertaining characters with various personality characteristics. Interesting insights into the lives of English bobbies in the rural communities. Well done!