Reading the Detectives discussion
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What mysteries are you reading at the moment? Old thread
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Susan
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Feb 05, 2016 08:55AM

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Indeed :)


I am waffling between re-re-reading a Stout (The Doorbell Rang) or a Ngaio Marsh (Death in Ecstasy)... ."
You can't lose either way. But I do love "The Doorbell Rang." At least if ..."
I ended up reading something completely different - The Patience of the Spider by Andrea Camilleri. But I will keep the Stout on my bedside table :)
Meanwhile a new month has brought a new round of BoTM. I have just finished the one for the Heyer group, A Blunt Instrument. Now reading a contemporary cozy for the Cozy Mystery group, Murders on Elderberry Road. The writing isn't bad but I am pretty sure that I have already spotted the culprit at about a quarter of the way through... Next will be our BoTM!
HJ, P.D. James' comment hadn't struck me until you pointed it out, but, yes, I'm definitely seeing from the Martin Edwards book that there were a lot of male authors at the time who were very popular but have now been largely forgotten.
I'm not sure, though, whether Christie, Sayers and the others you name were always the most popular of all, or whether they have just proved to have more staying power?
I'm not sure, though, whether Christie, Sayers and the others you name were always the most popular of all, or whether they have just proved to have more staying power?
P.S., it just struck me that P.D. James would have been old enough to read many of the Golden Age stories as they were published - she was born in 1920, so it would be nice to think that she read some of the 1930s books hot off the press as a teenager. I do like her books, and also liked the TV adaptations with Roy Marsden as Adam Dalgliesh.
Judy wrote: "P.S., it just struck me that P.D. James would have been old enough to read many of the Golden Age stories as they were published - she was born in 1920, so it would be nice to think that she read s..."
Very interesting; it adds a new (to me) dimension to her opinions.
Very interesting; it adds a new (to me) dimension to her opinions.
I love P D James - such a shame that we lost her last year. It is nice to think she read those books as they were published. If you think about it, she did tend to write many of her novels set in closed communities, which were popular in Golden Age mysteries.
I'm currently enjoying a very quirky contemporary mystery, The Herring Seller's Apprentice by L.C. Tyler. This is the first in the Elsie and Ethelred series, about a mystery writer called Ethelred and his loudmouth publisher Elsie.
This is not really like anything else I've read - I love the witty writing style, and am especially enjoying the extracts from Ethelred's latest novel, a sort of Inspector Morse spoof, although I don't think these bits have anything to do with the plot!

This is not really like anything else I've read - I love the witty writing style, and am especially enjoying the extracts from Ethelred's latest novel, a sort of Inspector Morse spoof, although I don't think these bits have anything to do with the plot!
Another one I have on my kindle and haven't got around to reading yet. I must bump that up the list, Judy :)

I don't think they were always the most popular, but I do think they had more staying power (and I suspect that that is what PD James really meant).

At the moment, I'm reading a book by a Danish author called Anna Grue. If I translate the title, it would be "the art of dying". It's the 3rd book in a serie with the detective Dan Sommer. I'm not sure the books have ever been translated into English, and if they haven't been translated, I think it's a shame.

Susan wrote: "Another one I have on my kindle and haven't got around to reading yet. I must bump that up the list, Judy :)"
Susan, I've now finished 'The Herring Seller's Apprentice' and must warn that the plotting and the ending in particular weren't nearly as good as the writing style, but I'm still eager to read the others in the series.
Susan, I've now finished 'The Herring Seller's Apprentice' and must warn that the plotting and the ending in particular weren't nearly as good as the writing style, but I'm still eager to read the others in the series.
Gitte, I just looked up Anna Grue at amazon.co.uk and looks as if her books have been translated into French, German and Italian but not English as yet - maybe that will follow!

Susan, I've now finished 'The Herring Seller's Apprentice' and must warn..."
I wasn't that crazy about this book so it has kind of been put on the back burner for me. I will probably get back to it.
On a more contemporary note, I just finished The Crow Girl - a very dark (and huge!) Scandinavian crime novel The Crow Girl and have just started A Spring Betrayal, which is the second in a series set in Kyrgystan.

I am reading The Unforgotten
, a debut novel which I requested from NetGalley. It is set in the 1950's and is really good so far.


Susan, are you a NetGalley member? The Unforgotten is not out yet, but is available to request for review?


Look forward to hearing what you think when you finish it!
I am currently reading Freya, which is apparently the sequel to Curtain Call. I haven't read Curtain Call, but am really enjoying Freya and, although apparently it shares some of the same characters, it certainly stands alone. I must go back to read the first book though, as I am loving Quinn's writing style so far.

I read and enjoyed Curtain Call so I have just requested Freya from NetGalley.


I am enjoying it, but it isn't a mystery (or not so far anyway) but a novel about the friendship between two women.

Still worth reading:-) Anyway I will see if I get it.
Oh yes, it is a great read so far. I just wanted to point out that it isn't a mystery, as Curtain Call seems to be a literary mystery and this is literary fiction.


It was an excellent read. I enjoyed the two threads of the old and new cases being brought together (and the final conclusion of them is epic) and even though it is a serial killer, there is no unnecessary or gratuitous dwelling on the more gory bits.

Leslie, I read the first few of that series when they first came out. You have reminded me that she is an author that I need to go back and re-read.

I've read others by this author and thought them very good. I have this on my to read list.



Sounds like it comes out better than "It's Pat".
That must take some serious writing skills. Maybe I will look for her.


Sounds like it comes out better than "It's Pat".
That must take some serious ..."
I had to search "It's Pat" to understand your reference! I don't think they're known in the UK. The Hilary Tamar books are very well written, and it was a while before I realised that because they're written in the first person no give-away personal pronouns are used, and Hilary could be male or female. This article argues quite convincingly that Hilary is male, but ... http://www.tor.com/2011/02/04/charmin...
As this article says, the most important aspect of the books (apart from the fact that they're good mysteries) is that they're very funny. I also think they're very British, but I think still comprehendible to non-Brits.

Sounds like it comes out better than "It's Pat".
That must take..."
I've added her first one to my Amazon list.
I've read a few of the short stories in Murder at the Manor: Country House Mysteries now and am enjoying them so far.
I've just read one by E.W. Hornung featuring his criminal hero, Raffles, who seems to be rather like a counterpart of Sherlock Holmes on the other side of the law, complete with his Watson-style sidekick, Bunny. Is anyone a fan of these? Intriguing that Hornung was Conan Doyle's brother-in-law.
I've just read one by E.W. Hornung featuring his criminal hero, Raffles, who seems to be rather like a counterpart of Sherlock Holmes on the other side of the law, complete with his Watson-style sidekick, Bunny. Is anyone a fan of these? Intriguing that Hornung was Conan Doyle's brother-in-law.

Hornung married Conan Doyle's sister, Connie, according to the little introduction by Martin Edwards to the story I've just read.
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