The Secret Adversary
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Seeking more of the same--Intricate but not-so-dark mysteries
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Kathryn
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Aug 19, 2008 12:32PM

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Good luck!




I too recommend Patricia Wentworth (cunning oldies). More recently, Lyn Hamilton archaeology mysteries. Plots themselves may not be intricate but the lengths & stages gone to solve whatever happened, are. She infuses impeccably-researched culture and lore.
I'm eager to try the Charlotte McLeod I've collected. From the 70s-90s, she was said to be hilarious but in very bizarre, sharply-plotted mysteries.

I'm a huge fan of Jane Austen and Agatha Christie, so tried to combine what I loved about both styles. Great, witty banter between the two man characters, and a mystery that will keep you guessing until the end.



For a clever set of short stories that I don't recall being murder mysteries, try Four Faultless Felons by G. K. Chesterton.
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Brass Keys to Murder (Stories from the Golden Age) (other topics)Four Faultless Felons (other topics)
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