HarperCollins Vintage Murder / Death in Ecstasy / Artists in Crime, Crime & Thriller, Paperback, Ngaio Marsh
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Price: £16.99
Brand: HarperCollins
Description: Commemorating 75 years since the Empress of Crime's first book, the second volume in a set of omnibus editions presenting the complete run of 32 Inspector Alleyn mysteries. HarperCollins Vintage Murder / Death in Ecstasy / Artists in Crime, Crime & Thriller, Paperback, Ngaio Marsh - shop the best deal online on thebookbug.co.uk
Category: Books
Merchant: Harper Collins
Product ID: 9780007328703
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Dimensions: 129x198mm
Keywords: crime,thriller,mystery,short stories,thrillers,historical,women sleuths,british,irish,detective,procedural,jeffery archer,john grisham,stephen king,lee child,kate mosse,dreda say mitchell,elly griffiths,murder under the sun,murder in paradise,cozy,cosy,queen of crime,jack reacher,cormoran strike,miss marple,hercule poirot,gifts,presents,anthology,murder,death,whodunit,village life,rural,beautiful books,ruth ware,christmas books,fiction,novels,series,the pale horse,sherlock holmes,
ISBN: 9780007328703
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Author: Amazon Customer
Rating: 5
Review: A good read from a favourite author
Author: Allan DB
Rating: 3
Review: The first Ngaio Marsh novel featuring Inspector Alleyn was a country house murder. The following five books, including the three in the present ómnibus edition are in the same tradition - a closed community with a limited number of suspects, i.e. a theatre, a hospital operating theatre, a church, a theatre again and an artist's studio. The formula is identical in almost every book. The stories are well plotted and written, the language very much of its time and the books were presumably aimed at the same audience as AC, MA and DLS. The second story here is the worst of the six, set in New Zealand, "Vintage Murder" is the only one not to feature Alleyn's usual sidekicks, Inspector Fox and Bathgate, the hack from Grub Street. The story doesn't take off and there is too much repetition of question and answer of the witnesses. The NZ background is interesting but the use of such colonial expressions such as corking, good-oh, crook etc. becomes tiresome - I'm not sure if NM is gently mocking them or not. Interestingly, the book includes the mind boggles and rubbernecking. In the third book of this collection, Alleyn meets Miss Agatha Troy,RA, Academy, not Artillery. If I like these books, why only 3 stars? The answer is Roderick Alleyn, MA(Oxon), Gentleman Policeman. Many years ago I read a later NM and enjoyed it but I find the early Alleyn difficult to like, he is simply too fastidious to be a policeman and should have stuck with the Foreign Office. His scenes with Miss Agatha Troy are ludicrous. In the first chapter of Artists in Crime we meet an American actress, or rather a grotesque parody of one, described as the success of the ship. One of the female artists is repeatedly described as a nymphomaniac. I wonder if the meaning of the word has changed over 80 years. I shall persevere with Alleyn and hope his charácter improves with age.