Payment in Blood
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Description
'Twists and turns keep you guessing for the whole book' ¿¿¿¿¿ Reader review
'All you could ask for in a murder mystery' ¿¿¿¿¿ Reader review
'I have already ordered the 3rd and 4th!' ¿¿¿¿¿ Reader review
'Absolutely brilliant' ¿¿¿¿¿ Reader review
'Meticulously crafted. A thundering good read' ¿¿¿¿¿ Reader review
An isolated Scottish mansion is the venue for a reading of a controversial new play by a West End theatre company. But on the very first evening, the playwright is savagely murdered, and Inspector Thomas Lynley faces the most testing case of his career.
For one of the suspects is Lady Helen Clyde. The love of Lynley's life.
As he attempts to untangle the family scandals, fierce theatrical rivalries and long-buried secrets that beset the case, Lynley struggles to balance the clinical detachment of his job with the intensity of his feelings.
Praise for Payment in Blood
'A treat - splendidly plotted and beautifully written'
Colin Dexter, creator of Inspector Morse
'The best novel of detection I have read in a long time. It scores on all counts: plot, pace, ingenuity, excitement and characterisation'
Ted Willis
'There is much here to solve, three detective novels' worth in the hands of a lesser writer. In Payment in Blood, however, nothing even seems so much as cluttered'
Washington Post
'Confirms the talent on such confident display in A Great Deliverance . . . The crisp, literate narration firmly draws us in'
New York Times Book Review
'George has aptly been compared to P.D. James, and her similar attention to subtleties of character lifts this traditional whodunnit out of the ordinary'
Chicago Sun-Times
Book Information
Posts
Now it gets personal...
The second case of Lynley and Havers hits closer to home, for Lynley's friend Helen is among the suspects. The case in this one was hard to follow, at least for me. I couldn't keep track of all the connections between the suspects. Although I like these 'a group is secluded, one gets murdered and one of them must be the killer' stories, this one didn't catch me. But what made this one interesting were all the personal entanglements. To watch/read how jealousy and class differences lead to wrong conclusions and how the side characters have to save the day. Definitely a fun read, although not quite as captivating as the first book.
Description
'Twists and turns keep you guessing for the whole book' ¿¿¿¿¿ Reader review
'All you could ask for in a murder mystery' ¿¿¿¿¿ Reader review
'I have already ordered the 3rd and 4th!' ¿¿¿¿¿ Reader review
'Absolutely brilliant' ¿¿¿¿¿ Reader review
'Meticulously crafted. A thundering good read' ¿¿¿¿¿ Reader review
An isolated Scottish mansion is the venue for a reading of a controversial new play by a West End theatre company. But on the very first evening, the playwright is savagely murdered, and Inspector Thomas Lynley faces the most testing case of his career.
For one of the suspects is Lady Helen Clyde. The love of Lynley's life.
As he attempts to untangle the family scandals, fierce theatrical rivalries and long-buried secrets that beset the case, Lynley struggles to balance the clinical detachment of his job with the intensity of his feelings.
Praise for Payment in Blood
'A treat - splendidly plotted and beautifully written'
Colin Dexter, creator of Inspector Morse
'The best novel of detection I have read in a long time. It scores on all counts: plot, pace, ingenuity, excitement and characterisation'
Ted Willis
'There is much here to solve, three detective novels' worth in the hands of a lesser writer. In Payment in Blood, however, nothing even seems so much as cluttered'
Washington Post
'Confirms the talent on such confident display in A Great Deliverance . . . The crisp, literate narration firmly draws us in'
New York Times Book Review
'George has aptly been compared to P.D. James, and her similar attention to subtleties of character lifts this traditional whodunnit out of the ordinary'
Chicago Sun-Times
Book Information
Posts
Now it gets personal...
The second case of Lynley and Havers hits closer to home, for Lynley's friend Helen is among the suspects. The case in this one was hard to follow, at least for me. I couldn't keep track of all the connections between the suspects. Although I like these 'a group is secluded, one gets murdered and one of them must be the killer' stories, this one didn't catch me. But what made this one interesting were all the personal entanglements. To watch/read how jealousy and class differences lead to wrong conclusions and how the side characters have to save the day. Definitely a fun read, although not quite as captivating as the first book.




