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Dalziel & Pascoe #24

Midnight Fugue

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"One of the best of the Brits, Reginald Hill, adds another winner to his résumé and another chapter to the saga of Dalziel and Pascoe." —  San Diego Union-Tribune From Internationally bestselling and Diamond Dagger Award-winning mystery author Reginald Hill, a riveting crime novel featuring Yorkshire coppers Andy Dalziel and Peter Pascoe as they tackle the case of a detective who went missing seven years ago under suspicious circumstances. Taking place within the space of a single October Sunday and alternating between Mid-Yorkshire and London, Midnight Fugue is a page-turning, complex mystery that builds to a dramatic, twisting conclusion.

368 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 2009

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About the author

Reginald Hill

154 books509 followers
Reginald Charles Hill was a contemporary English crime writer, and the winner in 1995 of the Crime Writers' Association Cartier Diamond Dagger for Lifetime Achievement.

After National Service (1955-57) and studying English at St Catherine's College, Oxford University (1957-60) he worked as a teacher for many years, rising to Senior Lecturer at Doncaster College of Education. In 1980 he retired from salaried work in order to devote himself full-time to writing.

Hill is best known for his more than 20 novels featuring the Yorkshire detectives Andrew Dalziel, Peter Pascoe and Edgar Wield. He has also written more than 30 other novels, including five featuring Joe Sixsmith, a black machine operator turned private detective in a fictional Luton. Novels originally published under the pseudonyms of Patrick Ruell, Dick Morland, and Charles Underhill have now appeared under his own name. Hill is also a writer of short stories, and ghost tales.

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5 stars
971 (35%)
4 stars
1,148 (41%)
3 stars
506 (18%)
2 stars
85 (3%)
1 star
29 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 241 reviews
Profile Image for Trish.
1,424 reviews2,736 followers
September 11, 2018
Reginald Hill is in a class of his own. His mystery series featuring Dalziel “the fat man” and Pascoe is a long-running masterpiece of British humor. Hill populates the series with many characters and much activity, but exhibits masterful control in keeping everyone doing…the wrong thing. Once again Dalziel, manages to extricate himself from an ambiguous-looking situation that would be career-ending for anyone else, and comes up accepting kudos from his coworkers—all except Pascoe, who thinks Dalziel might just as well retire before he does them all in. Dalziel knows he is not long for the force, but decides to hang on for the sheer cussedness of it, and the pain he knows it gives those who long to take his place.

I did not read the series in order—Hill is incredibly prolific, and has written 24 books in the Dalziel and Pascoe series. In this novel, we learn that Dalziel has survived a bomb attack previously and is back on the job a little worse for wear. He has forgotten which day it is and ends up driving madcap to work early on a Sunday morning. Just as well, since he has two cars following him which he needs to sort out before he gets back into the maelstrom that is work.

Dalziel is a “fat man,” but what we love about him are his appetites. He is enthusiastic, wily, generous, experienced, and has this case figured out long before he can prove anything. Hill even lets us into the secret, knowing full well that we have no way of uncovering information before he decides to share it with us. We love Dalziel because he is so much more incorrigible than we would ever allow ourselves to be, but he is that rare creature that always knows what justice is. We can reliably place ourselves in his hands and know that he’ll work out whatever trouble we face—though not without a few bumps and scrapes along the way.

I listened to the audio version from Whole Story Audio Books, and thought Jonathan Keeble did a brilliant job of the reading by distinguishing characters by accent, and giving the whole a perfectly comprehensible pace.
Profile Image for Laura.
4,316 reviews92 followers
January 3, 2015
One of the things I love about this series is how Hill keeps the relationships fresh, and how the mysteries do not seem to repeat in tone or nature. Don't get me wrong, there are certain moments that you know will come, certain catch phrases (or catch phrasing) that will be there (eg, the fatness of Dalziel, the education of Pascoe, the ugliness of Wield), but they don't bother me as much as constantly hearing of Nero Wolfe's "eighth of an acre of yellow silk pajamas" did.

And unlike in other series I've read, the characters really do grow. I can't remember another series in which the sidekick (in this case, Pascoe) has almost outgrown the master - it's a little like what they're trying to do with the Inspector Morse series, now that Colin Dexter has stopped writing (and Morse/John Thaw is dead). But in that case is feels like trying to repeat the original, while here it feels like natural growth.

As with the Lynley/Havers mysteries, it's not always Dalziel front-and-center. Here, Pascoe's almost an interfering parent figure to Dalziel's teenager, with Ivor having a larger role than usual and Hat and Wield almost totally off stage. One of my friends didn't like the lack of time together between the Unholy Trinity (as they're known), and while I'd like to see more of them I think the book is still very strong and it's only my sentimental attachment that wants that relationship to shine.

They mystery itself is relatively predictable, resolving itself into two different "problems". The solutions weren't completely telegraphed (always a good thing), even though Hill gave the characters one day to figure it all out. What puzzled me is that the "24 hours in which to do it" seems more dust jacket nonsense, as there was nothing in the book that suggested that if this wasn't solved that quickly something worse would occur.

This is a far more filmable book than the previous Dalziel/Pascoe mysteries, but I really hope that it doesn't get made (and not just because I think the roles have been miscast). It's the arc of the relationship between Dalziel and Pascoe that will get lost (having skipped a few "episodes") and that's a pity.
Profile Image for Jill H..
1,663 reviews100 followers
October 7, 2021
Dalziel is back after his near miss in "Death Comes For the Fat Man" and he is starting to doubt his detecting prowess, as are his underlings, Pascoe included. He starts this adventure on rather shaky legs but never fear. He finds his legs before the story ends and he returns to his obnoxious, lovable self.
This is a tale of murder, political power and old sins coming home to roost. It's complex, as all of Hill's books tend to be but not so complex as to cause the reader to lose interest. The villains are interesting and not exactly what they appear and the ending comes as somewhat of a surprise. This is a series that never grows old or repetitive. Hill is a master storyteller and although this may not be one of his best, it is still a dandy!!!
Profile Image for Koeeoaddi.
567 reviews2 followers
October 4, 2015
I read this out of order and I probably shouldn't have, but I don't think it really works as a stand alone novel. Besides the backstories that a reader of the series would know (and I didn't) there were too many characters and only a few of them were interesting. There was also hardly any interaction between Dalziel and Pascoe at all, which was disappointing. It's a 2.5 star book, but I'm giving it 3. How could a book with the following sentence rate less?

She wouldn’t have expected anything so fat to move so fast. He slid into his car like a tarantula going down a drain-hole...
Profile Image for Lisa Stammers.
266 reviews
June 2, 2017
No more Ivor. No more Hat. No more Seymour. No more Wieldly ( sigh!) No more Peter ( sob!) No more Andy ( say it isn't so!!!)
This wonderful journey has come to an end and what a wonderful journey it has been. Characters to love. Stories to get lost in. A genius to admire.
Bravo Mr Hill.
Profile Image for Marlyn.
203 reviews11 followers
January 4, 2010
A new Dalziel and Pascoe novel is always a cause of happiness for me. This one did not disappoint.

After a severe injury that left him in a coma, Andy Dalziel has decided to return to work sooner than advised. He's sure that everyone will be judging him to see if he's really ready, and thinking that he should just give up and retire. He gets a call from an old colleague, Mick Purdy, asking him to take an unofficial look into the case of a policeman who disappeared seven years earlier.

Dalziel bumbles a bit at first, and when one of his officers is injured, it seems that he should really have taken more time to rest. Pascoe and Wield begin to wonder if they'll continually have to mop up his messes, as is the reader.

This is a complicated tale of greed, mistaken (or maybe not?) identity, and possible police corruption.

Hill's prose is a treat to read, and as usual, I was torn between wanting to find out how the book ended and prolonging my enjoyment. I managed a happy medium, and although I thought the ending was too coincidental, it was nonetheless satisfying.
Profile Image for Rosalind.
92 reviews20 followers
May 26, 2011
Reg does 24! The ever-playful Reginald Hill comes up with yet another spin on the slightly surreal and delightful adventures of Fat Andy Dalziel and his unlikely sidekicks, know-all Pascoe who quotes Latin at him and granite-faced Wieldy who can break a suspect just by looking at him. This time we have a minute-by-minute account of an extraordinary Sunday in Mid-Yorkshire which begins with the improbable prospect of the Fat Man attending Morning Service in the Cathedral (the last time he was there he was playing God in the Mystery Plays) and experiencing a Bach fugue. The metaphor of the fugue is kept up through the day, with a string of bits of stories chasing each other until they disappear up their own arseholes, as Dalziel would probably put it. Or something like that anyway; to say more about those bits of stories would give too much away but of course they all collide in the end. As blackly funny as ever.
Profile Image for Tanja Berg.
2,361 reviews579 followers
October 4, 2015
Rating 2.4*. I almost upped this to three stars because of the fantastic epilogue. However, before that I had about 13 boring hours listening to a mystery that repeatedly failed to hold my attention. I struggled to keep the characters apart and even more to get in any way engaged in their lives.
Profile Image for Shannon Moeser.
520 reviews194 followers
March 3, 2021
I'm a late-comer to the Dalziel and Pascoe mystery series, but after reading Midnight Fugue, I've become a convert. This last book is a good place for a newcomer to start because it is one of the best books published in 2009. The story interweaves multiple plot lines into an overall theme with a dexterity that will intrigue readers. The conclusion is very satisfying, so resist the urge to read the ending before completing the book.
Profile Image for Owlsinger.
340 reviews
April 5, 2018
So now it's done. Whether he knew it or not, Mr. Hill left us with the last of this series delivering a satisfying wrap-up. Everyone's back on board; the 3 DCs are all healthy, Peter's assumption of Dalziel's responsibilities are wearing on him, Wield is well aware and worried, and Andy's return seems to be a fait accompli. I'm glad he didn't end with a farewell, riding off into the sunset summation. Now to see if he wrote other series...
Profile Image for Jon.
1,494 reviews
September 8, 2021
I think I've read every installment in this series and have now come to the last one. It is a worthy ending, suitably complex, funny, literary, with new tensions between Dalziel and Pascoe as Dalziel (with very mixed emotions) begins to admit to himself that he's going to have to retire soon, and Pascoe will be replacing him. I'm glad both detectives made it all the way through to the end, despite the title of #22 "Death Comes for the Fat Man." This is one of the best, most elegant, most consistently inventive series in crime fiction, probably best read in order if possible, since the relationships develop and several non-central characters reappear in later books. All of them are interesting with the possible exception of Franny Roote, who for me became tedious long before the author was done with him.
Profile Image for Rob Kitchin.
Author 57 books109 followers
July 7, 2012
Midnight Fugue is the twenty-second Dalziel and Pascoe book. The series has lost none of freshness, wit and verve. The story starts at a brisk pace and never lets up to the end. There are three main strengths to the book. First, the characterisation is excellent, and despite there being a large cast, each character is fully fleshed out and realised. Dalziel is a wonderful creation, possessing a number of negative traits, yet the reader can’t help but warm to his political incorrectness and bullying manner due to his generally good disposition. Second, the plotting, whilst quite complex and intricate, involving the intersection of several subplots, is very well done. Hill weaves the various strands together, whilst making sure the reader never gets lost, and there are two nice climaxes to the tale. It’s always difficult to avoid plot devices and the only let down to the telling were the use of two weak ones – both involving laptops and neither likely. Third, the storytelling and prose has verve and style. Hill manages to blend a serious crime story with farce, balancing seriousness with wit. It’s a difficult trick and he manages to pull it off with aplomb. And whilst the telling is so rich in detail and the plot reasonably complex, this is no doorstop of a book, and yet it does not seem rushed. The overall effect is a very enjoyable police procedural written by an author at the top of his game.
Profile Image for Mike.
Author 8 books46 followers
January 12, 2018
A terrific read, with a number of characters' lives moving piece by piece towards a grand climax. One of Hill's grimmer Dalziel and Pascoe titles, but strongly plotted and with some very unpleasant people involved. There is still humour, especially in the somewhat different relationship that forms between the series' two main characters as a result of Dalziel having been in hospital and on leave for a period (the result of being in an explosion in the previous story).
There's a nice unity to the story, with it taking place over a day, and being timed in the chapter headings to the minute.
The frank sexual language is perhaps true to the kinds of characters in the story, but it doesn't make for pleasant reading, and I could have done without it. The explanation for why the character who's been missing for seven years doesn't quite ring true to me, and seems just a little improbable.
Profile Image for J. Merwin.
Author 15 books6 followers
April 19, 2019
You know I love Reginald Hill's Dalziel and Pascoe mysteries but after about 50 pages...I dont know, it went so slowly and I was un-impressed by the villains. Couldn't keep with it.
17 reviews
July 9, 2017
It was my first novel from Reginald and man! I didn't knew what I was missing.... Such a gripping novel.... The plot was way different than any novel I have read so far.... And as the name suggests, it was really a 'fugue'
Profile Image for Leah.
1,789 reviews302 followers
February 24, 2024
Grand finale…

Andy Dalziel receives a phone call from an old colleague, Mike Purdy, asking for his help. Mike is about to marry Gina Wolfe, the widow of another police officer. Or is she a widow? Some years earlier, following the death of their young daughter, Alex had walked out on Gina and never been heard of again. His complete disappearance for so long means Gina can now have him officially declared dead, but suddenly someone has sent her a photo clipped from a local Yorkshire newspaper, and a man who looks very like Alex is among the crowd in the picture. So Gina is heading to Andy’s patch to see if she can find out who sent the photo and if Alex is alive. Dalziel agrees to help her, and this seemingly simple favour leads him and his team into a disastrous investigation that will leave one of them seriously injured and fighting for life…

As far as I know, Hill didn’t intend this to be the last in the series. When he died a couple of years or so after it was published, Amazon was listing a 25th book for pre-order, still untitled. It never appeared, so presumably it was at too early a stage for the publishers to ‘finish’ it. However, this one actually works very well as a finale. It’s hard to review the last in a long-running series without spoilers for earlier books. I’m not including any plot spoilers, but I will be discussing how things stand and end up for the various characters, so if you’re reading the series or plan to, you may want to skip this review.

Two books ago, Dalziel spent a long time in a coma after he was caught in a bomb blast. The last book saw him recuperating in the small spa town of Sandytown. This one begins on the day he is due to return to work. In his absence, Peter Pascoe has been in charge and has organised things his own way. While Peter is pleased at Andy’s recovery, he can’t help but be unenthusiastic at the thought of returning to his subservient role as Andy’s right hand man. Anyway Andy’s illness has been serious and lengthy, and he’s nearing retirement age, and all of his troops are wondering if he’s still got what it takes. When Andy makes a silly blunder followed by a very serious one, he too is wondering if he’s lost his knack, especially when his blunder leads to DC Shirley Novello being hospitalised. So behind the plot is this running thread – is Andy’s career over or will he come out his old triumphant self?

The plot is complex and interesting, involving dodgy businessmen, politicians, investigative journalists and corrupt police officers. But there’s still plenty of room for Hill’s trademark humour and for all the team to get a valedictory moment or two in the sun, although Dalziel dominates the story in this one. I feel that, after several books in which Hill made Pascoe and his growing angst the central theme, in the last couple of books he seems to revert to the style of earlier books in the series, when Dalziel was very definitely the major attraction, and the books were, usually, a little lighter and more entertaining. (There are exceptions along the way – a couple of the earlier books are dark indeed!) This delighted me, since Andy was always my hero, rudeness, crudeness, brashness, and all, and I increasingly found Pascoe a bit whiny and annoying. (Poor man – he had good reason, but still!) So as you can imagine, I was very much hoping that Dalziel would indeed quickly get back on track and put the rather patronising Peter firmly in his place – honestly, Peter deserved it!

It all works up to a tense showdown and just when you think it’s all over and are wondering about those loose ends, Hill gives us an epilogue which fills in all the blanks, creates some fabulous moral ambiguity and leaves the reader feeling guilty for being so pleased about the dramatic outcome! Is that vague enough to be tempting? I hope so!

And – definite spoiler here – of course Andy is triumphant! How could he not be?

I could nit-pick about certain elements of the story, but I don’t want to, so I won’t. Overall, this is as excellent as any of the early books, thoroughly enjoyable and it feels like Andy’s lap of honour after a race well run. A great finale to a brilliant series – as Andy himself would say, “Grand!”

www.fictionfanblog.wordpress.com
Profile Image for Anastasia Hobbet.
Author 3 books43 followers
September 22, 2011
I read this on a trip to England, so the atmosphere appealed to me, but the plot is overdrawn, with coincidences packed in so tight that they become absurd. This response may be due tot he fact that this is my first Reginald Hill, and he's written more than 20 other books in this series. Does this one stand alone? Not if you're not already addicted. Characterizations are thin-to-nothing, especially the poor women, and the depiction of that vaunted team of Dalziel and Pascoe evidently relies on characterizations from the past that still gleam in the reader's eye. I'm persuaded to believe that Hill is thoroughly sick of these two and posed this book as a sort of exercise for himself, to see how much intricate, outlandish nonsense he could pack into a single day of novel-time. I plan to read an earlier novel to balance my response to this one. Hill doesn't have millions of fans for nothing.
Profile Image for Carol.
32 reviews2 followers
April 2, 2010
I love the Dalziel/Pascoe mysteries and have read them all. This one was particularly interesting as the great Dalziel actually begins (following a serious injury and hospitalization) to doubt his nearly godlike abilities and Pascoe, in the absence of his old boss, has begun to assume more authority over the force. Both men were humanized by their changing roles and relationships and it added a lot to the book. Midnight Fugue also had one of the most interesting, chilling, and charming villains I can remember--a self-made immigrant, a thug who became a master of finance and an ally of Tory politicians, a devoted husband and father, and a cold-blooded killer. Even the minor characters, especially the competing investigative reporters, were compelling and very real. If you like classic British mysteries and aren't familiar with Reginald Hill, I recommend these strongly.
Profile Image for Jan.
416 reviews
February 19, 2020
My first Reginald Hill, and not my last. Not many police procedurals/detective stories successfully incorporate humor. I appreciate those that do. I chuckled often even though the story is a serious one.

I love Mick Herron’s series on the Slow Horses. In an interview, Mr. Herron said his character Jackson Lamb was inspired by Mr. Hill’s Dalziel, so of course I had to read one.

I picked a good one to start with. The story happens in 24 hours, and each chapter starts with the time duration for that chapter’s events. This is a great way to say “meanwhile”. Although it’s the 24th in the Dalziel & Pascoe series, I was not at a loss learning about the different characters and their idiosyncrasies built up over the series.

Looking forward to another Dalziel & Pascoe. And, perhaps I’ll watch some of the series.
Profile Image for Brooke.
944 reviews12 followers
January 3, 2010
The Dalziel/Pascoe are my favorite of any English mysteries series. Hill manages to always include some humor throughout. However, in years past, it has seemed that Hill had begun to take himself a bit too seriously and was missing the laughs that made me fall in love with the series so many years ago. Midnight Fugue is an absolute breath of fresh air. First of all, the entire story centers around the fat man. Dalziel's point of view is wonderful, always honest, often offensive and usually funny. (Pascoe, the original protagonist of the series, has--in my mind--turned into a bit of a poncy wanker.) Midnight Fugue is thoroughly entertaining throughout.
Profile Image for Barbara.
219 reviews20 followers
January 23, 2012
Not one of my absolute favourite Dalziel and Pascoes but Reginald Hill has never disappointed me. Reading, and re-reading, his mysteries is always pleasurable because of the complexity, humanity, the literary and musical allusions and the humour. Dalziel was the central character of Midnight Fugue - getting back to his old, entertainingly outrageous form - I was going to quote some of his bon mots but better that anybody who reads this review should come across them for themselves.

I give the first half of the book a five. But I found the denouement a bit too sudden so, overall, a four.

2 reviews
January 13, 2010
The latest entry in the series has a cunning twist - all action takes place in 24 hours. And, just like those days when you pull an all-nighter, you can't believe how much has happened in just 24 hours. In the space of the day, Hill creates several three-dimensional new characters, and gives the Fat Man some touching, and never-before-seen, vulnerability. Not the place to start the series, but a terrific addition for those of us who already love these Yorkshire cops.
Profile Image for Cece.
524 reviews
January 14, 2010
I gave this book over 100 pages, but when I was asked about a character and could not remember whether she was the damsel in distress, the mother, the lover, the personal assistant or the detective, I realized that this book was not engaging my interest on any level. With a mile-long TBR list, I'm throwing this one back.
Profile Image for Susan.
1,530 reviews54 followers
December 27, 2013
After recovering from a coma, Superintendent Andy Dalziel has started back to work. But a friend's request for help puts him at cross-purposes with his police colleagues. While it is interesting (and sometimes amusing) to see Dalziel so much on his own, I would have enjoyed a few more Pascoe appearances.
Profile Image for Colin Mitchell.
1,303 reviews18 followers
February 7, 2016
A day in the life of Dalzeil as he sets out to re-establish himself in the team and Mid-Yorkshire CID. A fast pace drives through the book as events try to runaway from him. Murder, old friends from London, corrupt policemen and dubious political funding are all here. The last full novel in the series.
23 reviews
September 20, 2018
I would have thought this an acceptable book from a first time author, or from one of the lesser names in the crime-writing genre. BUT - this is by Reginald Hill so I expected much, much more . A sensible plot with everything resolved at the end would have helped. Very disappointing.
Profile Image for Rebecca Carey.
18 reviews
February 8, 2011
I needed something not-too-taxing when I arrived in the States as my system was on overload from the move, and this really hit the spot - well plotted, well told.
22 reviews
April 25, 2011
This book seriously interfered with my study time for my final exam! I love the Dalziel character and highly recommend this series of police procedurals. Begin with the earlier ones though.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 241 reviews