smallhobbit: (Book pile)
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Once again I've read 7 books this month - I'm nothing if not consistent!

The Twyford Code by Janice Hallett

The second book by Janice Hallett arrived in the library only a couple of weeks after I borrowed the first one, despite having been reserved at a different time.  Again it's a rather quirky way of telling the story, this time through voice recordings of the main protagonist.  It's clever, but for me the cleverness obscured the rather dubious story.  She's a very popular author, so I'm probably in the minority. [F8]


Malice Aforethought by Francis Iles

Iles is a pseudonym for Anthony Berkeley.  I read this as a Shedunnit catch up book.  It's a classic of the genre, but I wasn't taken with the protagonist.  And whereas the idea is that the reader wonders if the murderer will get away with the crime, I was hoping he wouldn't. [F9]


Grey Stones by Joss Sterling

Another library book borrowed because it featured a murder in the Cotswolds.  Not a cozy crime, although part of a series, this one being set in Chipping Norton.  The plot itself is convoluted and clever, but there was too much irrelevant personal relationships for my taste.  I won't be reading more in the series. [F10]


Hamlet, Revenge! by Michael Innes

An early Inspector John Appleby.  This seemed to be the month for clever plots, but almost too clever.  I was hoping this would be a good introduction to the Appleby novels, but three plausible solutions all of which rely on tiny plot details to be proved was too much for me. [C5]


A Grave Mistake by Ngaio Marsh

The next Inspector Alleyn book.  I really enjoyed this one - the plot was well constructed and the characters were fun.  I had my suspicions, but they wavered.  All I wanted in a whodunnit. [D5]


Miss Pinkerton by Mary Roberts Rinehart


An American crime novel within the golden age.  This is the current month's Shedunnit book.  It's in the 'had I but known style' which I dislike and found myself telling the narrator that she should have been more careful and try thinking for a change.  As with many books I pass them onto my husband when I finish them and he read it in about two days and described it as a 'holiday read'. [E5]


The Widows of Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey

I've had this book on my TBR pile for at least a year.  It's set in Bombay in 1921 and is the first of the Perveen Mistry novels.  I enjoyed it, both for the setting and the story.  Mistry is a female solicitor working in her father's firm and as such is able to talk to female clients who would be unable to receive representation otherwise.  I definitely aim to read the next in the series, the historical details and the general atmosphere really caught my imagination. [B5]

[Letters refer to which reading list each book belongs to, nothing from List A this month as there were two last month]





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