Reading the Detectives discussion
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What mysteries are you reading at the moment? Old thread
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Lynne
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Jan 20, 2017 11:22AM

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That is one of the greatest classics of all mystery books IMHO. Did you guess who dunnit? I'm surely not going to spoil it for others by even hinting!!
I just started Slow Horses
about a group of misfit special agents who have been side lined to administrative tasks. It's the first in a series and I think I'm going to like it.




This has been on my TBR for ages. I really must get around to it, because it looks very interesting.

That is one of the greatest classics of all mystery books IMHO. Did you guess who dunnit? I'm surely not going to spoil it for other..."
I won't write a spoiler either---but I will say I began to suspect about 2/3 the way through. Yes, it is a classic!!
Blaine wrote: "Just found this group, happy for that!! I am between mysteries right now, but I just completed The Murder on the Links by Agatha Christie - it is her 3rd book and her 2nd featuring Poirot."
Welcome, Blaine! We have lots of Agatha Christie fans here so you have come to the right place. :)
Welcome, Blaine! We have lots of Agatha Christie fans here so you have come to the right place. :)

https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/a...
Lynne wrote: "Just finished Murder of Roger Ackroyd. Great!!!!"

Episode is #11 on our list:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/a...
Blaine wrote: "Just found this group, happy for that!! I am between mysteries right now, but I just completed The Murder on the Links by Agatha Christie - it is her 3rd book and her 2nd featuring Poirot."


Just found the podcast---A+. Thank you!

I have a couple books of hers on the shelf---my mother-in-law passes them along to me and I kinda forgot about them. Now I shall have to move them up the queue!
I'm just reading a British Library Crime Classics book on Kindle, Sergeant Cluff Stands Firm by Gil North. This is the first in the series about a Yorkshire detective and seems a bit darker and more realistic than most BLCC reprints - it is also more recent, published in 1960.
I've also got a mystery on the go in a physical book, Talking to the Dead by Harry Bingham, which is another first in a series, about Welsh police detective Fiona Griffiths. Compelling but *very* dark so far - I might need some lighter relief after these two books.
I've also got a mystery on the go in a physical book, Talking to the Dead by Harry Bingham, which is another first in a series, about Welsh police detective Fiona Griffiths. Compelling but *very* dark so far - I might need some lighter relief after these two books.
I enjoy books set in the Sixties, Judy, so will look at the Gil North one.
Andrew, I am really enjoying "Slow Horses," so far and it is a series I have also meant to read for ages.
Andrew, I am really enjoying "Slow Horses," so far and it is a series I have also meant to read for ages.

They both look good.

Re; Tana French. I have read all her books except The Trespasser and have liked them very much. However, I have to agree with you that The Secret Place was pretty weak and not on the same level with her other works. Disappointing but hopefully The Trespasser will be better. Did you like it?
Susan wrote: "I enjoy books set in the Sixties, Judy, so will look at the Gil North one.
Susan, I realised it is really set in the late 1950s, as it was published on January 1, 1960. I read through to the end very quickly (it's a short book) but wasn't really a fan overall as it is a bit on one note - everything is dark, dingy, gloomy, miserable etc. The writing style is very readable though. Anyway I've written a review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Susan, I realised it is really set in the late 1950s, as it was published on January 1, 1960. I read through to the end very quickly (it's a short book) but wasn't really a fan overall as it is a bit on one note - everything is dark, dingy, gloomy, miserable etc. The writing style is very readable though. Anyway I've written a review:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Good review, Judy. Having read it, I see your point! Maybe I will get to it, but perhaps it has dropped down my TBR list a few notches...


Incidentally, we had the same issue re: third-person vs first-person with two Christie novels, The Man in the Brown Suit (written from two different first-person perspectives) versus The Secret of Chimneys (written from a roving third-person perspective). The former worked EXTREMELY well, whereas the latter did NOT. (Much more about this on episodes 7 and 9 of our podcast: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/a....)
Jill wrote: "All About Agatha wrote: "We (Kemper & Catherine) both recently read The Trespasser, by Tana French.... We both adore her. Her last book, The Secret Place, was a little disappointing, but this one w..."

I've been dipping into the second Cluff book, not very impressed so far...seems to give new meaning to the notion of 'taciturn.' Reminds me a little bit of the Mosley series, but Insp. Mosley is much more entertaining.
Murder, Mr. Mosley
Thanks Miss M, I might try another Cluff but sounds as if I shouldn't hold my breath
I'll check out Mosley.
I'll check out Mosley.
I just finished The Shifting Tide, #14 in Anne Perry's Monk series: a Victorian London setting by a modern author. It's a series I really like but have ignored lately due to other reading commitments. I'm tempted to pick up the next one immediately. This one introduces Monk to the Thames and I know he joins the river police eventually.

Have you read the previous William Monk books? Which one is your favorite?
I have read the prior novels. I cannot identify a favorite (maybe Shifting Tide, but probably because I just read it). My least favorite was the one where they went to the US during the Civil War.

Susan, you may also enjoy the Amanda Cross series of books set in the United States 1960s. A feminist professor is the main character.
Thanks for the recommendation, Daniele, I will certainly take a look - I enjoy academic mysteries.

I think the one set during the Civil War was "Slaves of Obsession". Another series I love is the Thomas & Charlotte Pitt and my favorite one is the first book "The Cater Street Hangman"


I'm imagining it's hard to write mysteries set during contemporary times considering that DNA would be easy to spot out who the murderer is. It doesn't take as much leg or brain work as the detectives of old like Sherlock Holmes or Poirot.

I have read the first two Pitt books, but decided concentrate on only one of Perry's series (Monk) so I could keep them seperate. I have so many years of good reading ahead of me!
Reading What You Don't Know
which is an impressive debut and started
Dead Lions the second Slough House mystery. If anyone is a Le Carre fan, Mick Herron really gives spy mysteries a modern twist, but with lots of nods to the classic spy novel.







As do I. I never attended a college, although I had always wanted to. This gets me close anyway:}

Looks to be a one of those little village wth lots of old ladies mysteries, was published in 1968 when she was 20 but she wrote it when she was still at school.


I recently read this one too. It was a bit too grim for me, but I thought it was well written
I am about to start reading meet me in Malmo by Torquil Macleod an Anita Sundstrom novel only on chapter four first time reading this author. Really enjoying this book although i am just starting.


As a (former) Chicagoan I tend to stay away from stories about either Gacy or Richard Speck. I had a friend who had a friend was almost picked up by Gacy and I was in town when they were digging up the basement. I was visiting from Albany at the time. I was still in high school when Speck had his rampage (killing 23 Philippine nurses). There was a big fear running through the area between the time that the murders were known aand they found him at the Mark Twain Hotel (essentially a flop house at the time).




How do you like the Goldsborough books as opposed to the Rex Stout originals?



I just finished Dead Lions Dead Lions the second in the Slough House series. Really good and I think I may have discovered a spy series that is as compelling as Le Carre, albeit in a different way...
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