George V. Reilly

Review: A Presumption of Death

Title: A Pre­sump­tion of Death
Author: Jill Paton Walsh & Dorothy L. Sayers
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★ ½
Publisher: St. Martin's Paperbacks
Copyright: 2003
Pages: 384
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: January 30–Feb­ru­ary 1 2016

England, Spring 1940. The Phoney War is ending, millions have been evacuated from the cities to the coun­try­side, military bases have sprung up everywhere, and everything is topsy turvy. Lord Peter Wimsey and Bunter are abroad somewhere on a secret mission, while Lady Peter—the former Harriet Vane—minds a brood of children at their country house in Hert­ford­shire. A Land Girl is murdered in the village of Paggleham, and the local police su­per­in­ten­dent enlists Harriet's aid in solving the murder.

A Pre­sump­tion of continue.

Review: The Liberties of London

Title: The Liberties of London
Author: Gregory House
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ½
Publisher: Amazon Digital Services
Copyright: 2011
Pages: 147
Keywords: historical mystery
Reading period: 6–27 January, 2016

Red Ned Bedwell is an apprentice lawyer in Tudor London. He's trying to fatten his purse by running the Christmas Revels for his fellow clerks, but he's entrusted with minding a young innocent and keeping him from harm and temptation. The innocent is not nearly as naïve as his over­bear­ing mother believes and Ned must follow his trail through the stews of London.

The book is good at recreating the daily life of Tudor London in 1529 as the Re­for­ma­tion is developing under Henry continue.

Review: The Black-Eyed Blonde

Title: The Black-Eyed Blonde
Author: Benjamin Black
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Picador
Copyright: 2014
Pages: 304
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 12–16 January, 2016

Benjamin Black (the mystery-writing pseudonym of Irish novelist, John Banville) channels Raymond Chandler as he writes a Philip Marlowe novel. Robert Parker wrote a couple of books about a quarter-century ago with the approval of the Chandler estate. Black's book is also authorized.

The book has all the familiar elements of a Marlowe novel: the femme fatale of the title, the idle rich, ungrateful offspring and murderous staff, cynical cops, the baking heat of California, beatings and booze, Marlowe cracking wise, and the trademark Chan­dleresque similes.

If you like Chandler, you'll probably like Black's con­tri­bu­tion to the continue.

Review: Blind Justice

Title: Blind Justice
Author: Bruce Alexander
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Berkeley
Copyright: 1994
Pages: 336
Keywords: historical mystery
Reading period: 10 January, 2016

The first in a series about Sir John Fielding, the blind magistrate who founded the Bow Street Runners, London's first pro­fes­sion­al police force in 1749. Jeremy Proctor, a newly orphaned 13-year-old, is taken under Sir John's wing and assists him in dis­cov­er­ing how the rakish Lord Goodhope was murdered in a locked room.

Although I figured out the murderer halfway through, I still enjoyed both the plot and the characters. Alexander vividly brings Georgian London to life.

Review: A Dedicated Man

Title: A Dedicated Man
Author: Peter Robinson
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Avon
Copyright: 1988
Pages: 352
Keywords: police procedural
Reading period: 8–10 January, 2016

A Dedicated Man is the second novel in the Inspector Banks series. A local historian has been murdered in the Yorkshire Dales. He was well-liked and there seems to be no obvious motives or suspects. Banks must dig into the dead man's past if there are no leads in the present.

Like other books in the series, this is a competent well-written police procedural, partly seen through Banks' eyes and partly through the eyes of some of the locals. Robinson is an expatriate York­shire­man with a fondness for his homeland continue.

Review: Dollmaker

Title: Dollmaker
Author: J. Robert Janes
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ½
Publisher: Soho Crime
Copyright: 1995
Pages: 272
Keywords: police procedural, WW II
Reading period: 2–7 January, 2016

Occupied France, January 1943. Detectives Jean-Louis St-Cyr and Hermann Kohler are sent to the German submarine base at Lorient in Brittany to in­ves­ti­gate a murder. The Gross-Admiral wants a quick resolution to the case since the prime suspect is a U-Boat captain known as the Dollmaker, whose crew are de­mor­al­ized after many months of punishing cruises and who won't go back to sea without him.

St-Cyr and Kohler are unlikely partners, a Chief Inspector from the Sûreté in Paris and a longtime criminal policeman now in the Gestapo. Both are continue.

Review: Star Fall

Title: Star Fall
Author: Cynthia Harrod-Eagles
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Severn House
Copyright: 2015
Pages: 256
Keywords: mystery, police procedural
Reading period: Nov 28–Dec 3, 2015

Rowland Egerton, star of a popular antiques TV show, is found murdered in his London home. When Detective Inspector Bill Slider and his team in­ves­ti­gate, they uncover sordid secrets unknown to the British public.

This was a witty and en­ter­tain­ing police procedural, showing both the working and home lives of Slider and team.

Review: Pirate King

Title: Pirate King
Author: Laurie R. King
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Bantam
Copyright: 2011
Pages: 368
Keywords: historical mystery, Holmes
Reading period: 14–16 May, 2015

Mary Russell—Sherlock Holmes' much younger wife—in­ves­ti­gates the odd goings on in a British silent film company that's making a pirate film on location in Lisbon and Morocco in 1924. The filmmakers get more than they bargained for, as the rogues they cast as pirates seem to be real pirates.

A decent entry in this series.

Review: Bad Boy

Title: Bad Boy
Author: Peter Robinson
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Harper
Copyright: 2010
Pages: 387
Keywords: mystery
Reading period: 10–12 May, 2015

A woman calls at a Yorkshire police station to talk to her friend, Detective Inspector Alan Banks, about the gun she found in her daughter's bedroom. Banks is out of the country, however. An un­reg­is­tered gun is a serious offence under British law and the police take it very seriously. The daughter's friend—Banks' own daughter, Tracy—goes to warn the owner, and he goes on the run with Tracy. She's willing at first then realizes that she's in way over her head with this bad boy.

Another good entry in Robinson's long-running continue.

Review: A Midwinter Murder

Title: A Midwinter Murder
Author: Peter Tonkin
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
Publisher: Endeavour Press
Copyright: 2003
Pages: 251
Keywords: historical mystery
Reading period: 10–13 May, 2015

Tom Musgrave, sword master and master of logic, is called away from the Eliz­a­bethan court to the Scottish borders, where his brother has been found dead­—ap­par­ent­ly frozen in terror by the sight of a hellhound. Musgrave uncovers a nest of intrigue and murder when he returns home to in­ves­ti­gate.

Tonkin has written a good historical mystery, though I found the pro­ta­gan­ist's ra­ti­o­ci­na­tive powers improbable.

Previous » « Next