Georgette Heyer Fans discussion

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Duplicate Death
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Duplicate Death March 2021 Chapters 1-10






I wondered about that, especially with the banter! Then I realized with Hemingway’s personality, he might joke with all of his superiors!


A first-time read for me, Kindle version too. Only the third Heyer mystery I’ve read. It grew on me!

That was my thinking too. Fortunately they all settle into place!


I wondered about that, especially with the banter! Then I realized with Hemingway’s personality, he might joke with all of his super..."
There were so many witty lines in this title!

Pat is reading the letters from her sons, wherein one of the boys mentions lost gloves, followed later by (view spoiler) Those bits have stuck with me all these years. I just lost track of where I had read them!


Yes! Normally Ulli is not my favorite narrator, but her rather flat affectation is perfect for Cynthia and mama - and the awful auntie, Mrs. Pickhill! She even loosens up and has fun with Hemingway’s accent and comic asides! My only fault is with her Scots brogue and pronunciation of Celtic aphorisms from Sandy - those sound like garble, I doubt Scots sound like that!

Also, the mentions of the war make a touching reminder that these people have survived some difficult times. (view spoiler)
I'm reading an ebook copy, but I have this one in storage in another state.




One of the things Heyer does well is poke fun at her characters without actually being mean. She shows us who they really are with a touch of irony that makes me smile.
She shines at dialogue, too. I loved where Patricia and James are talking over the letters from the boys. That fond exasperation you often feel for your kids is there. Lovely!

One of the things Heyer does well is poke fun at her characters without ac..."
Yes, you describe her writing gifts so well!

Hang in there, dearest - try the audiobook if you can get it, sometimes a different medium makes it even more fun! (Just ignore the rather awful Scots brogue she gives Sandy!)
I enjoy listening while knitting, or doing boring housework, like folding laundry or doing dishes - makes the chores and the pages fly by...well, with my balance issues, I go slowly these days! ;)


I still like Why Shoot a Butler but it's not one of her very best mysteries. Like you said, the characters are less likable, they feel stiffer to me, and it has less of that humor which makes you smile as you read.
One reviewer suggested that Heyer didn't like her own brothers, as she wrote so many of them who were worthless jerks. Interesting thought. ;)

I still like Why Shoot a Butl..."
Lol, the brother theory has been floated here before, regarding other good and/or worthless brother characters Heyer created! ;)

I always do wonder if the unsatisfactory brothers was a subconscious thing or GH relieving her frustrations.


Oh, lucky one - good approach, savor and enjoy!

GH's lines about Cynthia's intellect are priceless!



Hi Mary is that a scan of your own copy?
If so, I can add that for you. Could you tell me the page count (not including any advertising or blank pages right at the end) :)

But, but..our romantic young couple have no legs! Oh, no!!

The man with the folded arms appears to be wearing a long dark coat, a long overcoat. At first I thought it might be a judicial coat, but definitely an overcoat, and holding a hat in his crossed arm hand. He has a hadlebar moustache and is wearing glasses.

Final page count is 233. I'd love to know how to post covers!

I can even read the artist's signature, it is M. Hooks. If you Google that name, and Bantam, you'll find an article about Mitchell Hooks, an American artist who did artwork for paperback covers for Bantam, Avon, Dell. Very nice samples shown as well.

Unfortunately you have changed your avatar. Could you upload the book cover again, only not as your avatat (profile picture) & I will take it from there. :)

I've saved a copy on my desktop, so you can change your profile picture back now if you want. :)
I'm in the middle of something else for Goodreads now, but I'll upload your edition as soon as I have finished that.

What I am finding surprising - is the liberal use of the word 'pansies'. I guess it is a sign of the time in which the book is written. It is amusing in a way.

Unfortunately you have changed your avatar. Could you upload the book cover again, only not as your avatat (profile picture) & I will take it from there. :)"
& added.
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/5...
I forgot to ask - does your copy have an ISBN? :)



The lady across the street is from Scotland. I'm thinking of asking her interpretation of the Scottish words. More fun than googling them, right?
As I remember Hannasyde used to complain about Hemingway's "psychology", didn't he? So this keeps that same feeling going. :)

True, it does feed Hemingway good lines for his comedic banter, and since he requested Sandy at the outset, you know he likes and respects him - I just wonder if the narrator’s Celtic pronunciation is any good!
Having read other Hemingway mysteries, I know this is just his personality, and as Heyer points out, his superiors wouldn’t tolerate his cheekiness if he wasn’t so good!

Oooh, perfect! If you have the audiobook, play her a bit and see what she thinks...yes, I always enjoyed Hemingway’s humor - Hannasyde was his “straight man” in the early books, tolerating his humor and psychological insights, and now his own sergeants fulfill the role!

No audiobook, unfortunately. But she's a card and will be good for some fun when I get a chance to ask her to interpret. :)
I've wondered before if when Heyer split up H&H she wanted to try a different sort of relationship with the Inspectors, but then missed the chance for humor she had and so introduced Grant to get it back. I know I always miss that bit of levity till he shows up.

Yes, Sandy is a great character, great foil for Hemingway- low-key, calm, unflappable - I can see why Hemingway asked for him!


I am not enjoying this anywhere near as much as everyone else. In fact, I'm finding it a slog. It's slow and the murder scene description is way too graphic.
The characters are all so unpleasant! Pat and Jim are whiny rich people lucky to live in a mansion and afford a nanny for their horrid children. I don't think Jim should have gone to war. That's terrible! The last of the Kanes! They should have found him something safe to do. Thank goodness he survived.
This story is way too dated. Too much smoking and I'm not amused by the homophobic slurs Hemmingway tosses around. He used to be fun and witty. He's been a cop too long. I like Grant, even if he's a prude. He's funnier.
Terrible Timothy reminds me of a P.G. Wodehouse character with his blithe spirit and innocence. Unless he's a murderer. Beulah of the awful name is a weird woman. She puts up with too much abuse from her employer and she's very high strung.
Mrs. Haddington is ghastly. She's abusive to her employers and then wonders why they quit. She's the type to think good help is hard to find. Yeah ... you think? Maybe if you go back to the time when slavery was legal you might find "good" help. If she was the murder victim I would not be surprised. (view spoiler) I'd be sorely tempted if I were Beulah or the maid or the dressmaker.
That Seton-Carrew fellow is a blackmailer and a liar if ever I saw one. What does he have on Mrs. H and is she so dead set against him flirting with Cynthia because a)she's jealous b)she's worried what he's going to say or do or c)Is he a biological relative of Cynthia's, like her father perhaps? I feel sorry for young Butterwick. To be someone's last choice dinner guest and only invited to make up the numbers has to sting. To be different, possibly to be arrested and imprisoned just for being who you are had to be extraordinary difficult and heartbreaking. To watch the one you love, if Butterwick is indeed in love with Seaton-Carew, flirting with a girl you know he can't love as she ought to be loved, is enough to make anyone snap. I don't get the impression Butterwick is gay though. I think he's impressionable and socially awkward. He does try to psycho-analyze himself which is funny. I didn't know "autistic type" was a thing that early. I don't think he's a murderer though. Too high strung.
No one is looking at the seamstress. The poor, overlooked spinster who loves to hear about celebrities. She made me think of Miss Bates in Emma- the same elderly, talkative, looks up to her "betters" type person. I have much sympathy for her and if Mrs. H ended up murdered, I'd be looking at her! Poor lady.
I think the person who called in the murder to the paper is also the murderer.
At the end of the chapter Jim seems all right- still laid back and not too worried about what his little brother gets up to. They seem to get along better now they're adults and Terrible Timothy isn't trying to compete with Pat for Jim's attention and past the gangster phase. How fitting he became a lawyer!["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>
Books mentioned in this topic
Duplicate Death (other topics)Emma (other topics)
Why Shoot a Butler? (other topics)
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This is going to be our first group read of this title. I hope (in these troubled times) that no one has had trouble getting hold of it.
Critterbee & I decided just two threads for the mysteries went well for They Found Him Dead. So there could be open spoilers in the second thread as well - so read at your own risk! :) & please only discuss things that happened up to & including Chapter 10 in this thread. We don't want to spoil a first time read for anyone! Please use spoiler tags when necessary in this first part.
This is the first read of this title in this group but I have read it at least 10 times before. Here is my (hard cover) cover.
So, is this anyone's first read of this title? If not how many times have you read before? What format are you using this time?