RANDOM JOTTINGS


A blog about music, sports, theatre and rants





First of all, apologies for lack of posts. I have been busy and have just had my grandchildren to stay so exhaustion, happy exhaustion I hasten to say, is the order of the day and I am still recovering.

It is now nice and quiet and I am sitting in my favourite chair with the laptop and a rug round my knees to keep me nice and warm and so here I go.

Years ago when I worked in the library system I discovered some books on the shelves Highgate Library by an author called Peter Lovesey.  They were set in the Victorian period, so appealed to me straight away, and featured Sargeant Cribb. I took one home, read it, loved it Sergeant-Cribb-by-Peter-Loveseyand then proceeded to read them all.  Some time later I was delighted to see that there was a tv series coming up and starring one of my favourite actors, Alan Dobie (later I loved him in War and Peace when he played Andrei and was quite quite wonderful).

And then what? Well, nothing really. I did not read any more Lovesey and years passed and I did not think any more about him UNTIL a few years ago I picked up a book in Waterstones, a paperback by PETER LOVESEY.  Surely it cannot be the same author I read all those years ago I thought. He must be dead by now (My apologies to you Peter. I am so glad you are alive and kicking).

I read it and, as I usually do when I discover a series I like, I got hold of them and read the lot. I galloped through them and thoroughly enjoyed them and this year when I was in a bit of a reading lull, I fished out my Kindle and decided to read them all over again.  First time when I do a blitz read like this I get carried along by delight at all the books waiting for me and zap along. And then a second read is so enjoyable as I take my time a bit more and savour them.

This is what happened this time and oh how I enjoyed reading about Superintendent Peter Diamond and, what made my reading even more enjoyable, is that they are set in Bath one of my favourite cities in the UK, and as I am familiar with some of the landmarks used in the books, I can place the characters which enhances enjoyment (and that is a very long sentence…)

Inspector Diamond is overweight, dresses badly in crumpled suits, wears a trilby and can be seen to be overbearing and stubborn, but underneath this somewhat unattractive exterior there lurks a kind hearted man who adores his wife Stephanie, and grudgingly their cat, and supports his team through thick and thin.

The writing is sharp and flows along beautifully and also is very funny.

"Asked to wait in the showroom he felt like Gulliver in Lilliput surrounded by miniatures ……Finely made as they were to a man as incorrigibly clumsy as Diamond, such exquisite little pieces represented a thousand potential hazards. It was a mercy when he was called into the managerial suite.  Having negotiated the showroom without mishap, the big man tripped on an afghan rug and lurched forward, grabbing Barnaby's outstretched hand and practically dragging him to the floor. Bits of china around the room rattled but nothing was broken.

'Never look where I'm going' he admitted ' when I was a kid my knees were permanently covered in scabs'

Barnaby looked more shaken than his guest"….

If you are looking for a good crime series to read and have yet to discover Peter Lovesey then I can wholeheartedly recommend these books. Well thought out plots and a main character that you cannot help warming to.  Whenever he is in trouble or needs to sit quietly and think he goes to Bath Abbey:

"On the west front were carved a number of figures attached to twin stone ladders. The founder had dreamed of angels ascending to heaen and his vision had been immortalised this way…..as sometimes happened in medieaveal church architecture, a touch of humour had crept in. At odds with the iconography, certain of the angels were clearly descening the Bath-abbey-angel-ladder-north-close-up ladders head first.

Diamond's sympathies were wholly with these misfits trying to come down against the flow. How they would pass the aspiring ones just below them was anyone's guess.

The dilemma spoke to his troubled brain in terms of personal crisis and never failed to lift his spirits…..he'd find a way to move on. He always did"

I am going to Bath in a couple of weeks and I fully intend to go and look at the West Front and seek out these angels.

Do read these books. You will love them.

Oh and one of his colleagues is a policeman called Wigful. Superb. Sounds like a character from the Barsetshire chronicles.

 

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17 responses to “Peter Lovesey – Inspector Diamond books”

  1. Sheila Beaumont Avatar
    Sheila Beaumont

    It’s delightful to see a comment from Peter Lovesey himself! I had the pleasure of meeting him at a book signing at Book’em Mysteries, South Pasadena, CA, several years ago. I have almost all of his Diamond mysteries in paperback, but I think there are actually a couple I haven’t read yet, so I’ll look them up and download them to my Kindle.

  2. Joan Kyler Avatar
    Joan Kyler

    I have 13 of them waiting for me on my Kindle. I’ve read at least two that aren’t on my Kindle. I do love the long series mysteries, too. It gives one something to look forward to.

  3. Elaine Avatar

    I am delighted to hear it!!

  4. Elaine Avatar

    Thanks for the recommendations Debbie – I do like to find a nice long series!! May I also recommend, if you have not come across them yet, the Bill Slider books by Cynthia Harrod-Eagles. Witty and funny and very well written

  5. Elaine Avatar

    Number 19 due next year!!

  6. Elaine Avatar

    No 1 The Last Detective is very good but it ends with Peter Diamond leaving the police force and the second and third are outside in civilian life before he returns. I think they are not as good as the others and perhaps that is why you stopped?

  7. Elaine Avatar

    Landmark does have lovely apartments. that one sounds fantastic
    One of the great things about internet and Kindle is the ability now to track down long ago books and discover them all over again.

  8. Elaine Avatar

    I have not read them for years Pam but am going to reread now, I remember enjoying them very much

  9. Elaine Avatar

    Breathing and writing! Perfect. Long may it continue

  10. Ann Avatar
    Ann

    You are preaching to the converted Elaine! Lovely to see a comment from the author. I remember his very first book, Wobble to Death, which won a prize – but I can’t remember what the prize was.

  11. Debbie Avatar
    Debbie

    I also enjoy the Lovesey books and am steadily working my way through them. They have that comfortable feel – like an old and valued friend.
    If readers like the continuity of long series like the Loveseys – can I suggest another couple of series that people may find of interest? I picked them up from a reference in a blog (may have been this one perhaps?) and have been very enamoured of them. ( am not on any retainer from them – honest!
    These are both by Charles Todd ( a mother and son combo from the States) -the first are the Inspector Ian Rutledge books set just after WW1 and the second are the Bess Crawford mysteries (she is a nurse in WW1). Both deal with the reality and aftermath of war and the scars created and left behind. The writing is tight and well researched, the characters believable and they are both series that, if you like them, have a large number of books to get your teeth into (Rutledge 20 and Crawford 11).

  12. Mary Ronan Drew Avatar

    Inspector Diamond is exceptionally well done. I’ve been reading slowly through the series not wanting to face the prospect that one day my time with the inspector would be over. But as you point out, they are the sort of thing that deserves re-reading. So . . .

  13. Sue Cuthbert Avatar
    Sue Cuthbert

    Examining my book-of-books-read I find I’ve read nine in total, most of the Victorian series, but only 2 of the Diamond books ……..and I have no idea why. I shall see what Suffolk Libraries have in stock and find out why I stopped after just 2.

  14. Erika W. Avatar
    Erika W.

    Oops, I misspelt the writer’s name ; should be Lovesey. I apologize both to he himself and to you.

  15. Erika W. Avatar
    Erika W.

    Ah!
    I read a couple of Lovesay books when they first come out. I enjoyed them but couldn’t find following ones in the public library (yes, it was back in pre-Kindle and much of the Internet days)and forgot about this author.. Now, on your say-so, I’ll be starting again, thank you for reminding me. I’ve been looking for detective stories.
    Some years ago we stayed at the Landmark Trust apartment above the National Trust shop in Bath, right next to the abbey. We could lean out of a window and almost touch the Jacob’s ladder angels; one of the nicest holiday venues we have ever had.

  16. Pam Avatar
    Pam

    I’m working my way through the Peter Diamond series but haven’t tried Sargeant Cribb. The Victorian Period is not my favorite but I will give it a go based on your recommendation, Elaine.

  17. Peter Lovesey Avatar

    Thanks for this generous mention, Elaine. Yes, I’m still breathing, and more importantly, still writing. Just delivered number 19 in the Diamond series. Great to see the illustrations in your blog. You did well to find them. If you visit my website at http://www.peterlovesey.com you’ll see some of mine.
    Peter

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