RANDOM JOTTINGS


A blog about music, sports, theatre and rants





Delighted that the word has spread that Random likes a murder or two and the odd spy thriller thrown into the mix as evidenced by a wonderful collection of books that have hit my door step in the last few weeks.

One of these was A Foreign Country by Charles Cummings.  I have read several of of Charles Cumming's books and have enjoyed every single one. I think this is his best one yet and he seems to improve with each title published.  I have felt in some of his previous stories that sometimes they lag and slow Ccdown, but this one starts slowly and builds up to a really tight exciting finish.

The tagline is 'Britain's chief spy vanishes. One week will make or break M16'.  Amelia Levene is due to take up her position as the first female head of M16 when she vanishes. There is no sign of possible defection, no ransom has been demanded and yet she has vanished without a trace.  Thomas Kell, a disgraced M16 officer, is pressed back into service and tasked with tracking her down.  So off he goes and this is where I love spy thrillers.  The intricate details of the 'legend', the back up, the drop zones, the aliases, the tricks of the trade – all totally fascinating.

Kell finds her but all is not as it seems and behind an innocent acquaintance with a handsome companion with whom she appears to be enjoying a holiday, lurks a plot, a possible rogue operation to discredit Amelia and wreck her career. But who could be behind it?  A disgruntled person in her past or is it closer to home?  OK so not saying any more or else I will give it all away and I certainly don't want to do that. As I said, A Foreign Country is a slow burner, it builds and builds, layer upon layer of intrigue, double bluff and double cross culminating in an extremely exciting climax which I could not help but think would make a terrific film.

Tight and pacy narrative and I thoroughly enoyed it. Already looking forward to the next one.

Next up, the latest Bill Slider mystery from Cynthia Harrod-Eagles, Kill my Darling.  As well as the wonderful Morland Saga which, thank heavens seems to have been reprieved for the moment, this author writes the most excellent, amusing and pacy thrillers with her two main protagonists, Bill Slider and his elegant side kick Atherton.   Since reading these books, which I have been doing for several years now, I started watching Lewis and now because of the similarities in description and characteristics, I find it difficult now to separate Atherton from Hathaway who is, of course, Lewis's bagman.  Not complaining about that but I wondered if the writers of the Lewis series had read thse books and perhaps subconsciously adopted the two personas.  Just a thought…

No matter, this one is terrific, as always.  Melanie Hunter, a charming, attractive and intellligent paleantologist is reported missing by a neighbour in the house where they both rent a flat.   At first the report is down played by the police until it is discovered that the neighbour who reported her disappearance is a convicted murderer, now out of prison and living quietly on his own.   He and KillMelanie appear to have struck up a friendship and, naturally, suspicion falls on him.  But, as we all know, this is merely a red herring and though Slider and Atherton have to investigate him, it is clear that Melanie has dark family secrets that just may have something to do with her death and the police are going up the wrong path.

So there you go – not giving any more info away as I want you to get hold of this book and read. I am full of admiration for Cynthia Harrod-Eagle's versatility; her simply stunning series of historical novels, the Morland Saga, display not only her brilliant writing but a depth of knowledge and research which always blows me away and this series of detective novels also benefit from this expertise.   Not only is the police procedure sharp and to the point, but the book is people with such great characters: Norma Swilley of the CID, blonde and glamorous with great legs who has survived all the sexism and banter from her male colleagues; Maclaren never seen without a bacon sarnie in his hand or feeding his face with a Mars Bar but in Kill my Darling, strangely quiet and we discover he is in love; Atherton, tall, elegant, fighting shy of commitment, more happy with his cats and his cooking and Bill himself who I simply adore.  In the first of these detective novels Bill is married but fairly unhappily to Irene and then investigating a case, he meets Joanna who plays in an orchestra.  It is a coup de foudre and throughout the series we have the running thread of his relationship with her and the ups and downs it entails, as well as his friendship with Atherton.   As with the Simon Serrailer novels of Susan HIll, the personal runs alongside the professional and we come to care about Slider and Atherton and what happens to them. 

And as well as all the above, CHE has a wonderfully witty and amusing style which will make you grin as well as admire the police work:

Chief Inspector Porson who mangles the English language and is really Mrs Malaprop:

"It's the early boss that gathers the moss" Porson retorted "If it goes bad, the press'll be all over us for not jumping to it right away…they love a damson in distress"

Slider barely blinked. He was used to Porson's hit or miss use of language and the old boy was sharp as a tack and a good boss.  A bit of Bush in the boss was worth bearing for the sake of the strand in hand"

and then a description of another officer "….whose tact, sensitivity and sweetness of nature made him about as popular as Hitler at a bar mitzvah"

Wonderful stuff and another terrific story with a twist at the end, though this time I had an inkling of what it would be, which isn't always the case.

I have a further pile of crimfic awaiting me and will write further about those tomorrow.  I am reading like a demon at the moment to try and reduce this heap, have done three in two days so hoping to have another crack at them tomorrow.  Am also in the middle of a Michael Donnelly blitz which I think I mentioned before and will post about those shortly.

Have a good weekend everyone.

 

Posted in

10 responses to “Body Count – a crimfic roundup”

  1. Elaine Avatar

    The Bill SLider books are such a delight and I feel she writes them as a complete rest from her historical series. I have read each one as they have been published and think they are excellent, funny, exciting and great story lines
    I never watched Morse, could not get on with him at all, and only watched Lewis by accident one night and found I enjoyed it. I remember the feeling when my children were young that could not watch a series starting at 8pm by then my brain had usually shut down!

  2. Liz F Avatar
    Liz F

    I think that I must have read the first five or six of the Bill Slider books and loved them but then either the library stopped getting them, or CHE had a bit of a gap in writing them and they fell by the wayside.
    I had forgotten her humour until I read the excerpts you quoted and now I want to start them again from the beginning – heading over to the library’s online requests right now.
    I want to re-read the Morland saga too but might have to wait until someone invents a way to slow down time before I manage that.
    Haven’t watched Lewis,so I have no idea who Hathaway is but then I didn’t watch Morse either as I was in the middle of child-rearing when it used to be on and there was absolutely no way I was going to be able to watch a series which started at 8pm. Did try recording episodes but never got around to watching them after that so gave up!

  3. Elaine Avatar

    Breussel – oh I do flick through the ads, no way can I bear to watch a programme on commercial TV live. I tend to record and watch later. Downton Abbey was a case in point, totally ruined by the ad breaks and loads of complaints from viewers. The upcoming TItanic series looks as if it will be exactly the same so will be recording

  4. bruessel Avatar
    bruessel

    I’m surprised you don’t have a recording device that allows you to fast forward through all the ads. I couldn’t imagine my TV life without one, unless it’s something like Wimbledon, where I want to know the outcome as it happens, I record everything now and watch it at my convenience.

  5. Elaine Avatar

    I came across the Bill Slider books by accident and have been with them since Numero Uno. I love them and think they are excellent. I watch Lewis on DVD as the ads drive me crazy too. I am looking forward to the Titanic series starting soon but just know that the ad breaks will make it almost unwatchable and as it is going to be a huge hit the TV company will have sold millions in advertising revenue.
    We will hve to agree to disagree on Hathaway!

  6. Mary Jenkins Avatar

    I too love Bill Slider and all the characters in that series. In fact it is my benchmark for police detective novels and most others don’t measure up.
    I don’t watch Lewis because I can’t stand all the adverts., nor do I like the actor who plays Hathaway, so I haven’t made the connection.

  7. Elaine Avatar

    Yep know the feeling Jo – have read three in the last two days and am dithering now which one to take down next

  8. Elaine Avatar

    I have it in mind to read all the Morland saga starting from the beginning and am keeping my eye open in charity shops for copies which do turn up, also library sales. Do let me know what you think of them. The Joyce Dennys is just wonderful

  9. Jo Avatar

    Always good to hear about more authors to look out for. I have rather a pile of crime, thriller novels looking at me whilst I type. I just cannot seem to read quick enough at the moment!

  10. ChrisCross53 Avatar

    Not a crimefic comment, but re Cynthia Harrod-Eagles, on your recommendation I am delighted to say I found The Fallen Eagles in the library, which is next on my list to read (after Henrietta’s War, by Joyce Dennys). No sign of the earlier books in The Morland Dynasty, but I will have to hassle them to get me the rest and work my way back through the centuries.

Leave a Reply to ElaineCancel reply

Discover more from RANDOM JOTTINGS

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading