English Mysteries Club discussion
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The Canadian "Cabot Cove"? I love Penn..."
There was one in a special monastery for chanting and the one about the higher level guy in Toronto, but I didn't like them as much. So all killers head to Three Pines!

I hope the ew Eizabeth Gerge gets her back, Heen was the wrong one to kill off. Why kill off anybody? It's of people in UK are killers!

Didn't you feel as though both Barbara and her Pakistani neighbor were acting like complete idiots throughout the entire book? Barbara used to be a quirky, intelligent person and a pretty damned good detective. In this book, she spent 700 pages doing almost everything wrong because of her emotional involvement with the neighbor and his kid. I just couldn't take it any more. No more Elizabeth George for me unless someone I know and trust reads it first and assures me that George has gotten her groove back.

anna

And yes, I have go to authors (Stephen King,Kate Atkinson, Susan Hill to name a few) for when my brain fails me. 8:D

Hey - just starting my first Susan Hill mystery "The Various Haunts Of Men" - everyone seems to love this series - high expectations - not necessarily a good thing - hah!
I found that one particularly unusual - it was her first venture into detective fiction and she broke almost all the rules - also not necessarily a bad thing though ;)

I'm a big fan of Ruth Rendell and especially like her Superintendent Wexford series. (Btw, reading them out of order is not problematic.) The two I finished recently are A New Lease of Death and Shake Hands Forever. Give any Wexford novel a try!

I used to love Elizabeth George, but I think she's lost it...."
Joan, I completely agree about Elizabeth George, alas. Her earlier, shorter books seemed to have more humor (especially with Barbara Havers) and spirit. The last few I read were too heavy, not just in heft, ha ha.

One of the many things that was completely wrong about Just One Evil Act is that George had more or less written that story very well and much more succinctly many years ago. There was a Lynley novel in which Havers gets all tangled up in Azhar's family problems, there is a murder, Lynley gets involved, Azhar's daughter gets tossed into the sea from a boat by an evil relative, Lynley dives overboard to save her, Havers gets in trouble for disobeying orders (what else is new?), etc. and so forth. It was a gripping, imaginative, successful story! Deception on his Mind, I think. Why did Elizabeth George feel the need to revisit that theme (and make a 700-page mess of it) when she'd done such a good job on it the first time?




I just picked up Dead Men's Bones at a nearby used bookstore because it looked good. I've never read any of his books before, though--hoping to read it on vacation this month.


I read this one; it is the last Wexford novel. Rendell wrote it shortly before she died, and she was clearly no longer at the top of her game. As I said a few posts ago, however, all of the Wexford novels are at least good. This is one of the ones that's good but not great.



I have found several new Scots authors this year and this one is worth a look, with a bit of good old caustic wit going on too. The author is apparently a legal bod in the Scottish system so knows his stuff.


I have found several new Scots authors this year and th..."
This looks interesting. I'll take a look at it.

Next up, I think I'll tackle 'Kith and Kill,' part of the Inspector Rafferty series from Geraldine Evans. Also very well done and entertaining.


Yeah, I have heard that from some other folks. My 'inherited' collection of Innes' books only has a handful more and the only one I really want to fill in is #4, Stop Press.

Looked up Kith and Kill as I had never heard of this series. Was surprised to find that there are 3books by 3 different authors all with the same Kith and Kill title.......hah!

"Who Saw Him Die" is another one. There's the book by Sheila Radley (another good Brit Cop series, BTW) and the first in the Gregson/Percy Peach series. Different book, same title.



Thanks. I have this book on hold at the library.



That's what they say. One thing I really like about the Dalrymple books are the great covers.



But, Diane, Wentworth is a treat!

Diane - think of Patricia Wentworth's female detective, Miss Maud Silver, as a kind of Miss Marple, knitting while listening to her clients and interviewees, and drawing out their secrets. Much revered by the Scotland Yard detectives. delicious! But as Karlyne says, lots of character development and good locales. 30+ of them.
For people who don't know, most of them are on Audible too, brilliantly read by Diana Bishop.

I would put it as Miss Silver is the professional counterpart of Miss Marple.

I wonder why there has never been a television series featuring Miss Silver? Surely just made for it?

I would put it as Miss Silver is the professional counterpart of Miss Marple."
True, Miss Marple is fluffy and keeps her sharpness hidden (I do love her, too), but Miss Silver is instantly recognizable as intelligent and professional.
Miss Marple would have a hard time earning a living as a detective, because people have such a hard time believing that she's keen-witted.

I wonder why there has never been a television series featuring Miss Silver? Surely just made for it?"
Oh, boy, wouldn't that be great?!? (I mean, hopefully it would be.)

Books mentioned in this topic
The Taken (other topics)Sherlock Holmes: Murder at the Savoy & Other Stories (other topics)
Wicked Autumn (other topics)
Cover Her Face (other topics)
A Mind to Murder (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Alice Clark-Platts (other topics)Chris Ould (other topics)
Adrian McKinty (other topics)
Will Thomas (other topics)
Anna Katharine Green (other topics)
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Just One Evil Act