English Mysteries Club discussion
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I like that one too, but not quite as much as The Franchise Affair, and The Daughter of Time - which is a marvellous story about Richard III!

I love The Man in the Queue, The Singing Sands, and Miss Pym Disposes.
And of course, The Daughter of Time is unique and brilliant.

I really like The Franchise Affair but you did pick out two of the three that are atypical mysteries (the 3rd being Daughter of Time)!
Of the others, I also really like A Shilling for Candles (which is soooo much better than the Hitchcock film - and I am a huge Hitchcock fan).
Apparently I read that in July 2006. I can remember nothing about it! Of course that's why since joining Goodreads I now write reviews...

Too funny! I have Brat Farrar on the way and The Man in the Queue (that is an almost impossible word to type, by the way!) by my side, so I can compare them soon!

Leslie - you're right. I suppose 'Brat'' and 'Franchise' aren't in my crime novel zone. More troubling, maybe, than I like to stomach. But really popular, so it suggests that when a novelist gets a really good idea, even if off the usual track, it's best to run with it, as it will have real author's heart in it.
Most writers seem to keep to a style, for sales reasons, I suppose, but then they can become mechanical. Recent comments re Elizabeth George, Peter Robinson and others suggest that.



This is next on my list! I'm finishing up one of the "lost" Louisa May Alcott's, A Long Fatal Love Chase. It's very Victorian and full of flashing eyes, etc., but I'll persevere!



I could not agree more.


Just finished it and can't wait to read more. I've been told by another reader that her later books were not as good.
Since joining Goodreads the only novel I've read by Elizabeth George is her second in the series Payment in Blood. In my review I comment on her tendency to "lose the plot", which from other readers' comments has become more and more of a problem with her increasingly lengthy novels.
My review contains nothing about the plot, in this case, so you are quite safe to read it, Lorraine :)
My review contains nothing about the plot, in this case, so you are quite safe to read it, Lorraine :)

It's odd isn't it, that mysteries seem to be getting longer and longer, yet the mystery element is no more complex! As you say, it's so often the "soapy" element which is developed.


What are you thinking of it? I'm finding it interesting, and I thought I'd already found two bloomers in the first 30 pages or so, but on researching, it was me and not Josephine!

Hi there! Glad to see you posting again :)

A pet peeve of my dad's (and me too)!





1963. 13 year old Alison Carter disappears wi..."
I read that book earlier this year. Did you feel that it dragged on in the final third? I really like this author's work, but I felt this particular one could have been cut down by 100 pages or so. My favourite of hers so far is The Grave Tattoo.

I love Carter Dickson though I've never read that one, love Agatha Christie and Josephine Tey. If you haven't already read it I would suggest Tey's Daughter of Time. It's a classic.

I picked up Daughter of Time (at a thrift store!) a few years ago and I do love it. Carter Dickson has been elusive for me, though, so I'm looking forward to making his acquaintance.



I didn't think the book came alive until page 91 in my copy, Mrs. Everett's debut. Grant seems a bit stereotypical and not real?


It's definitely getting better and might even have a good ending!




I enjoy Barbara Cleverly's books. I've started my first Elizabeth Chadwick, but it must take a backseat while I read Long Walk to Freedom with another group.

this will be my first Elizabeth Chadwick, I really enjoy historical fiction that takes place in the Plantagenet then Tudor eras (as well as before & after ;>))I think my predilection for history is why I prefer the 'period' mysteries so much.



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I love both Tey and Sayers! However I think that The Man in the Queue is not one of Tey's best, so if you don't like it, please try another (perhaps Brat Farrar…)