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Envious Casca (Inspectors Hannasyde & Hemingway, #6)
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Group Reads > Envious Casca December 2018 Group Read Chapters 1-8

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Karlyne Landrum | 3895 comments Mine has an obviously 1970 bouffant hair-do on the cover. With somebody underneath it, but I have no idea who!


Barb in Maryland | 816 comments At least the edition I first read had the courtesy to have a dead body on the cover!
Envious Casca (Inspector Hemingway #2) by Georgette Heyer


Teresa | 2186 comments I have the car cover one as well. Very slow going for me at the moment. Our lovely Irish Wolfhound is very unwell and I think we're near the end. Finding it difficult to concentrate on anything at the moment. Hoping to get most of it read the weekend. Have to say I've seldom come across a more unlikable bunch of people in one story.


message 54: by Margaret (new)

Margaret | 613 comments Teresa wrote: Have to say I've seldom come across a more unlikable bunch of people in one story.

I take it you haven't attempted Penhallow yet. ;)


Sheila (in LA) (sheila_in_la) | 401 comments Teresa wrote: "I have the car cover one as well. Very slow going for me at the moment. Our lovely Irish Wolfhound is very unwell and I think we're near the end. Finding it difficult to concentrate on anything at ..."

Sorry to hear about your dog, Teresa. Yes, this book is short of warm & fuzzy feelings. I like Mathilda, I find her sympathetic, but I am wondering why she wanted to spend Christmas with these people--perhaps she's not what she seems?


Karlyne Landrum | 3895 comments Margaret wrote: "Teresa wrote: Have to say I've seldom come across a more unlikable bunch of people in one story.

I take it you haven't attempted Penhallow yet. ;)"


Hahaha, Margaret! You are so right!


Karlyne Landrum | 3895 comments I was just wondering, by the way, why authors have to name their characters with the same initials. I mean, Maud, Mathilda, and Mottisfont, Stephen and Sturry, and the worst yet, Hemingway and Hannasyde (I invariably mix them up, even when only one of them is in the book). If I should ever write The Great American Novel, I shall take great care to start at "A", move on, and not repeat myself.


Barb in Maryland | 816 comments Karlyne wrote: "I was just wondering, by the way, why authors have to name their characters with the same initials. I mean, Maud, Mathilda, and Mottisfont, Stephen and Sturry, and the worst yet, Hemingway and Hann..."

I know, Karlyne, I know--it can drive me crazy! Especially the Hemingway, Hannasyde one. What was GH thinking?!?


Teresa | 2186 comments Margaret wrote: "Teresa wrote: Have to say I've seldom come across a more unlikable bunch of people in one story.

I take it you haven't attempted Penhallow yet. ;)"


No. Guess I'm in for another treat :-)


Teresa | 2186 comments Sheila (in LA) wrote: "Teresa wrote: "I have the car cover one as well. Very slow going for me at the moment. Our lovely Irish Wolfhound is very unwell and I think we're near the end. Finding it difficult to concentrate ..."

Thanks Sheila. It's been one of those years. I'll be glad when it's gone.


Karlyne Landrum | 3895 comments Teresa wrote: "Sheila (in LA) wrote: "Teresa wrote: "I have the car cover one as well. Very slow going for me at the moment. Our lovely Irish Wolfhound is very unwell and I think we're near the end. Finding it di..."

Some years are like that, but hopefully they're in the minority. So sorry your sweetheart is going.


message 62: by Jackie (new) - added it

Jackie | 1729 comments I see the end of chapter 8 coincides with the end of Christmas Eve.

I enjoyed the police interviewing the snobby butler while he Put Them In Their Place.


Alison Squires | 4 comments Karlyne wrote: "Rosina wrote: "I don't think it's a spoiler to say that this is set in England, at Christmas, with snow. My audio-book cover however has a different imageEnvious Casca (Inspectors Hannasyde & Hemingway #6) by Georgette Heyer"

Uh, nice..."


Maybe the illustrator thought they had to draw something Casca might be envious of.


Critterbee❇ (critterbee) | 2786 comments Alison wrote: "Maybe the illustrator thought they had to draw something Casca might be envious of..."

Haha!


Teresa | 2186 comments Karlyne wrote: "Teresa wrote: "Sheila (in LA) wrote: "Teresa wrote: "I have the car cover one as well. Very slow going for me at the moment. Our lovely Irish Wolfhound is very unwell and I think we're near the end..."

Thanks Karlyne, yes it's been the year from hell since way back in January. Hard to take at times. Hope the next one is a whole lot better.


Alison Squires | 4 comments Karlyne wrote: "I was just wondering, by the way, why authors have to name their characters with the same initials. I mean, Maud, Mathilda, and Mottisfont, Stephen and Sturry, and the worst yet, Hemingway and Hann..."

I have the same problem with names starring with the same initial. It gets very confusing for me. Mind you, I also have problems with TV shows where people have the same color hair and similar dress sense, so maybe I'm just easily confused.


Karlyne Landrum | 3895 comments Alison wrote: "Karlyne wrote: "I was just wondering, by the way, why authors have to name their characters with the same initials. I mean, Maud, Mathilda, and Mottisfont, Stephen and Sturry, and the worst yet, He..."

Maybe it's our eyesight: I'm horribly near-sighted!


Karlyne Landrum | 3895 comments Teresa wrote: "Karlyne wrote: "Teresa wrote: "Sheila (in LA) wrote: "Teresa wrote: "I have the car cover one as well. Very slow going for me at the moment. Our lovely Irish Wolfhound is very unwell and I think we..."

Well, if you keep reading this one, it will make you glad that your family isn't as bad as they are. Which is a blessing of sorts, but maybe a more traditional feel-good Christmas story might be a better idea!


Carolm | 63 comments This is the first attempt to read the book. My copy is a 1975 Panther copy with some holly, burnt matches and a large knife inserted into a book with a cross on the cover.


Critterbee❇ (critterbee) | 2786 comments Carolm wrote: "This is the first attempt to read the book. My copy is a 1975 Panther copy with some holly, burnt matches and a large knife inserted into a book with a cross on the cover."

That cover sounds interesting! I looked through all of the alternate covers on GR (trying to find this cover) and there is quite a range of variations.

Do you have a photo of the cover, so that we can upload it? Oh let me consult the Google....


Critterbee❇ (critterbee) | 2786 comments

Is this it?


Carolm | 63 comments That's it. I couldn't find it myself.


Critterbee❇ (critterbee) | 2786 comments Carolm wrote: "That's it. I couldn't find it myself."

Sweet, I will upload the edition - 1975 Panther. Is it a paperback edition? How many pages does it have?


Carolm | 63 comments Paperback, 217 pages. Published in 1961 by Panther Books, reprinted (a lot of times) 1975.


Carol She's So Novel꧁꧂ Critterbee❇ wrote: "

Is this it?"


Great cover!


Critterbee❇ (critterbee) | 2786 comments Carolm wrote: "Paperback, 217 pages. Published in 1961 by Panther Books, reprinted (a lot of times) 1975."

Thank you for the details, Carolm.


Rosina (rosinarowantree) Critterbee❇ wrote: "

Is this it?"


That's the paperback version I have - I assume the prayerbook is Maud's, unless she lost that too! The matches I am less sure about.


Susan in NC (susanncreader) | 4143 comments Alison wrote: "I don't mind people being awful as long as they're entertaining while they do it (this probably explains a lot about my marriage ;-)). So far the only character I don't like is Stephen. I've only r..."

LOL, yes! Reminds me of the British comedy Absolutely Fabulous- awful people, but entertaining. I remember they tried to Americanise the show for audiences here, but it didn’t catch on, I guess they made the two lead women too nice - lost the edge!


Susan in NC (susanncreader) | 4143 comments Rosina wrote: "I don't think it's a spoiler to say that this is set in England, at Christmas, with snow. My audio-book cover however has a different imageEnvious Casca (Inspectors Hannasyde & Hemingway #6) by Georgette Heyer"

Now that’s interesting, I’ve seen another Heyer mystery with that very same cover art Why Shoot a Butler? by Georgette Heyer !


Diane Lending (dianefromvirginia) | 24 comments Susan in NC wrote: "Rosina wrote: "I don't think it's a spoiler to say that this is set in England, at Christmas, with snow. My audio-book cover however has a different imageEnvious Casca (Inspectors Hannasyde & Hemingway #6) by Georgette Heyer"

Now that..."


It's a perfect cover for Why Shoot a Butler. Seems like it might have been erroneously picked for this book.


Susan in NC (susanncreader) | 4143 comments Teresa wrote: "I have the car cover one as well. Very slow going for me at the moment. Our lovely Irish Wolfhound is very unwell and I think we're near the end. Finding it difficult to concentrate on anything at ..."

Oh, I am sorry for your dear pup - that’s a very difficult time, I know. Beloved family members, we want to take good care of them as they mean so much to us, take so little and give so much!


Susan in NC (susanncreader) | 4143 comments Karlyne wrote: "I was just wondering, by the way, why authors have to name their characters with the same initials. I mean, Maud, Mathilda, and Mottisfont, Stephen and Sturry, and the worst yet, Hemingway and Hann..."

Thank you!


Susan in NC (susanncreader) | 4143 comments Teresa wrote: "Karlyne wrote: "Teresa wrote: "Sheila (in LA) wrote: "Teresa wrote: "I have the car cover one as well. Very slow going for me at the moment. Our lovely Irish Wolfhound is very unwell and I think we..."

Amen, sister!


Susan in NC (susanncreader) | 4143 comments Rosina wrote: "Critterbee❇ wrote: "

Is this it?"

That's the paperback version I have - I assume the prayerbook is Maud's, unless she lost that too! The matches I am less sure about."

Maybe all the smoking.


Karlyne Landrum | 3895 comments Susan in NC wrote: "Rosina wrote: "Critterbee❇ wrote: "

Is this it?"

That's the paperback version I have - I assume the prayerbook is Maud's, unless she lost that too! The matches I am less sure about."
Maybe all th..."


The matches must've been part of Paula's littering!


Susan in NC (susanncreader) | 4143 comments Karlyne wrote: "Susan in NC wrote: "Rosina wrote: "Critterbee❇ wrote: "

Is this it?"

That's the paperback version I have - I assume the prayerbook is Maud's, unless she lost that too! The matches I am less sure ..."

Exactly, she is a rude piggy!


Teresa | 2186 comments Thank you for all your kind comments about my dog. We had to have him put to sleep this afternoon. We're devastated here and my husband is in bits. The poor guy was suffering so there was no choice. We were blessed to have he for so long.


Critterbee❇ (critterbee) | 2786 comments Teresa wrote: "Thank you for all your kind comments about my dog. We had to have him put to sleep this afternoon. We're devastated here and my husband is in bits. The poor guy was suffering so there was no choice..."

Oh Teresa, I'm so sorry to hear that.


Abigail Bok (regency_reader) I’m so sorry for your loss! But glad you had the courage to show mercy to your beloved companion when he needed it the most.


Teresa | 2186 comments Thank you so much Critterbee and Abigail. Yes he was in a bad way in the end. Went downhill with speed since yesterday morning. It's so damn hard though and we're keeping fingers crossed for our little guy left behind. So far he's ok. He's a very independent chap.


Karlyne Landrum | 3895 comments So, so sorry, Teresa!


message 92: by Jackie (new) - added it

Jackie | 1729 comments I'm sorry for your loss but we have to make the decision to end their suffering. Pet are family, no doubt.


Teresa | 2186 comments Karlyne wrote: "So, so sorry, Teresa!"

Thanks Karlyne.


Louise Sparrow (louisex) | 460 comments I'm still reading... on and off. I find the mysteries much harder to read than the regencies, something about the style.


Abigail Bok (regency_reader) I agree with you, Louise--the mysteries have a harder, meaner edge.


Critterbee❇ (critterbee) | 2786 comments Louise Sparrow wrote: "I'm still reading... on and off. I find the mysteries much harder to read than the regencies, something about the style."

I agree - with the Regency and Georgian books, there are usually only one or two unsavoury characters, but in the mysteries there are often a lot more!


Karlyne Landrum | 3895 comments It must be a matter of personal brain waves. The mysteries tend to crack me up, and I run through them very quickly.


message 98: by Margaret (new)

Margaret | 613 comments Critterbee wrote: with the Regency and Georgian books, there are usually only one or two unsavoury characters, but in the mysteries there are often a lot more!

That's practically a necessity of the genre. When you're writing a murder mystery, you usually want a fairly large pool of potential suspects--characters whom the reader can believe to be capable of murder.


Susan in NC (susanncreader) | 4143 comments Teresa wrote: "Thank you for all your kind comments about my dog. We had to have him put to sleep this afternoon. We're devastated here and my husband is in bits. The poor guy was suffering so there was no choice..."

I am so sorry, Teresa, I don’t know how I missed this whole thread.


Susan in NC (susanncreader) | 4143 comments Abigail wrote: "I agree with you, Louise--the mysteries have a harder, meaner edge."

Very true, you have to be in the mood for snark!


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