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March 2018 Group Read: The Crow Trap, by Ann Cleeves
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Nancy, Co-Moderator
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Feb 28, 2018 01:36AM

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If you like plodding along books, then I am sure you would appreciate this one. I personally like it to move a faster.



Yes, there were a lot of choices on this one. I did read this in about 3 days, but I just wanted to get through it, so I could move on to the next book. I did think that once Vera was introduced, things did move more quickly. The retelling from each person's perspective is what bogged this book down for me.

Just like with her Shetland series, it took me quite a while to get into this book and start caring about the characters and I'm not sure I ever really did apart for Grace and Vera. I loved the description of Northumberland, the country and its people and whilst I knew some of Vera's back story, I didn't know all.
I though there were quite a lot of unbelievable red herrings in this book and it annoyed me quite a bit. They were obvious. Moreover, I am married to a scientist and know a lot of them and they would not act so immaturely. The end, I didn't quite believe this murderer could really have pulled it off.
Will I read another one, yes, but it better be good.



Definitely not. I prefer it too, but for this one because of the TV series, for me it has already gone out of sink.




So, who were your favorite characters?
I liked each character better when we were reading their own point of view, though it took a while to warm up to Vera. I imagine that this book was very different for those who already knew Vera.
I liked Anne and I would have liked to read one more conversation between her and her married lover, or see some other kind of follow-up.
I felt bad for the way Grace grew up, and it doesn't seem realistic that there wasn't more gossip about how her grandmother and family abandoned her. It was such a small community and they were so well known. Especially after her death. Even a small community paper would be on top of that.
Come to think of it, I don't recall any type of press or news people in this book.

I also love the Vera tv series and will have the fabulous Brenda Blethyn in mind as I read the book!

So, who we..."
I agree the ending was strange and for me quite a bit arbitrary and unbelievable. I still don't quite understand why Grace got killed and I thought it was sad as she was my favourite character. Also thought it a bit strange that there wasn't more local coverage in some shape or form about that awful's family treatment of her. All in all there are quite a few problems with the book, but I'll give one more a try and then see.

I too was sorry that Grace was killed. I really wanted to hear more of her story. I don't really see the motive for it. It would have made more sense to kill her father since he knew the secret.
spoiler alert
(view spoiler)




I AM grateful to this group, however, in that it expands my scope of the types of books I'm reading to other genres. Thank you.

It would be interesting to know more Cleeves' intent with this book, Nancy. I would think that she did intend it to be a series since she had written two previous mystery series, one with 6 books and one with 8. My hunch is that Vera's backstory will evolve over the first few books as it did on the tv show. I am in love with Brenda Blethyn as Vera, but she does not match the description of her in the book. Sorta glad about that. :)


I thought that TV and book Vera have similarities, but are quite different. I love both Brenda Blethyn and her character in the TV series, but they are quite different, so part of me would like to find out the difference. We'll see.
The same happended with her Shetland series, Jimmy Perez in the book and in the TV are quite different. As I read the books first and Perez background is quite important to his perception of himself and the island, which is also part of the people of Shetland's history, I found the TV Perez very different and really off-putting at first. But again, the TV is excellent, so reconciled myself to TV Perez. For what it is worth, I think this is quite a compliment to both Anne Cleeves writing and the producers her books seem to attract. There are a couple of American crime writers which have series and again the main characters are very different and I can't watch it as the TV series is really just not good enough.

I am a couple of seasons behind on the Vera tv series, so I watched an episode from season 5 last night. It seems that tv Vera is just as cantankerous and abrasive as book Vera, but physically she's more appealing.
Gisela, I had the same reaction to Jimmy Perez. He's portrayed as dark and swarthy from his Spanish heritage in the books and then he's played by a slight blond guy! But I also got over it and got into the tv series and just separated it from the books and started to enjoy it. It seems that the producers of both tv shows have invested quite a lot to make them very high-quality series. (I agree with you about some of the American series - I'm thinking Harry Bosch specifically, which I can't watch!)

Somehow I missed out on the Harry Bosch books and I didn't even know there was a TV series.

I love the Harry Bosch series by Michael Connelly. I am almost through the whole series and don't want to finish too quickly.

I also love the Harry Bosch series! I'm all caught up on those. Always excited for the next one. Michael Connelly is actually how I got into this genre of books. I love his Lincoln Lawyer books too.

I think I've had the first Harry Bosch book on my to-read list for a long time. I just started reading mysteries again recently, so there are a lot of good series waiting for me.




(view spoiler)
Overall an enjoyable read though I still think the buildup was a tad too long. While I didn't mind reading about the characters and found their backgrounds interesting I personally really love the investigation and getting into the detective's mind as they solve the case and I wish we had gotten more of that in this book. Not sure if I'll read the other books in the series but I'm glad I read this one.

If you have a smart TV you should be able to subscribe to Amazon and / or Netflix - there'll be a menu for apps you can access them via, but you'll need to sign up online first.
I use a Roku stick as my TV isn't smart ( with apologies to my TV, it isn't it's fault ). My girlfriend's TV is also an older smart TV and the apps stopped updating, so I got her an amazon fire stick, for about £30
( at the risk of adding another level of distraction, I keep considering cancelling my amazon tv account, as netflix just has so much more god stuff, but Bosch, Hap & Leonard, Mr robot and The Tick are just about enough to keep me on board )

I think agree with much that has been said - I found the opening and the first few chapter truly excellent, but then the pace slowed so much I did find the going rather laborious. Cleeves seems far more interested in the social and character background than the mystery itself - which isn't necessarily a bad thing by any means, although personally I'd have preferred that balanced a little more by plot progression.
I thought the saving grace was the sense of place and the characterisation, the latter of which was exceptional. Cleeves is clearly a gifted and experience writer and portrays very well rounded characters - although I did find Vera Stanhope herself to be one exception. Especially in the earlier sections of the novel, when Vera was seen from the other characters'point of view, I found her rather broad and cartoonish (which was, I think deliberate both on the part of the author and Stanhope herself, as a kind of Columbo-esque way of being discounted by others).

Paul, welcome back Morocco is on my list of travel destinations. I have to say I really like the story with all of the detail of the landscape and characters. To me it was a story that just happened to have a murder or two.

That's an interesting point, Paul. We learned so much about Ann, Grace and Rachel and many of the other characters, but not so much about Vera. I will read more in this series and look to Cleeves to flesh Vera out as she did Jimmy Perez in the Shetland Island mysteries. Your point about her being outstanding at creating a sense of place permeates that series in spades!