callmemadam: (reading)
2018-10-02 10:47 am

September books



Battlestar Suburbia, Chris McCrudden
Dandy Gilver and a Most Misleading Habit, Catriona McPherson
The Death of Anton, Alan Melville
Honourable Intentions, Gavin Lyall
One Enchanted Evening, Anton du Beke
Love is Blind, William Boyd
A Colourful Death, Carola Dunn.
thoughts )
callmemadam: (reading)
2018-09-03 11:03 am

August books



Hotel Sacher, Rodica Doehnhert
A Private View , Michael Innes
Love in an English Garden, Victoria Connelly
The Dead Shall be Raised & The Murder of a Quack, George Bellairs
The Skylarks’ War , Hilary McKay
Now We Shall Be Entirely Free, Andrew Miller
The Singing Masons , Francis Vivian
Death of a Busybody, George Bellairs
Quick Curtain, Alan Melville
reviews )
callmemadam: (reading)
2018-01-31 03:51 pm

January Books



The Illustrated Dust Jacket 1920-1970, Martin Salisbury
The Daffodil Affair, Michael Innes
Bookworm: A Memoir of Childhood Reading , Lucy Mangan
Tom’s Midnight Garden, Philippa Pearce
The Family From One End Street, Eve Garnett
Further Adventures of the Family from One End Street, Eve Garnett
Holiday at the Dew-Drop Inn, Eve Garnett
Private – Keep Out, Gwen Grant
Wild Grapes, Elizabeth Aston
Life with Lisa, Sybil Burr (1958)
How to Stop Brexit (and make Britain great again), Nick Clegg
The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole, Sue Townsend
The Seed Woman, Petra Durst-Benning
London Rules , Mick Herron
Jacob’s Room is Full of Books, Susan Hill
The Secret of High Eldersham, Miles Burton
thoughts )
callmemadam: (crime)
2017-09-02 03:23 pm

August Books



Death is a Word, Hazel Holt
Player One, Douglas Coupland
Taken at the Flood, Agatha Christie
Before the Rains , Dinah Jefferies
Murder Underground, Mavis Doriel Hay
Defectors, Joseph Kanon
Miss Marple’s Six Final Cases and Two Other Stories, Agatha Christie
The Revolving Door of Life, Alexander McCall Smith
Slow Horses, Mick Herron
Last Fling, Sue Gee
Dead Lions, Mick Herron
opinions )
callmemadam: (crime)
2017-01-13 08:15 am
Entry tags:

Death of an Airman, Christopher St John Sprigg



This is one of a set of British Library Crime Classics which I bought cheaply from The Book People before Christmas. The reprints are variable in quality but I liked this one.

The action is centred on a flying club (the book was first published in 1934 and people were ‘air-minded’) which also teaches people to fly. One of the would-be flyers is the Bishop of Cootamundra, who hopes to ferry himself around his large Australian diocese. An experienced pilot dies when his plane seems to spin out of control and crash. At first a verdict of ‘death by misadventure’ is recorded but the bishop notices something odd about the body. This leads to first a murder inquiry and then an investigation into a dope (cocaine) smuggling operation which covers Europe and may be centred on the airfield.

There are plenty of twists and turns in the plot and lots of geeky flying details for those who like that sort of thing. I did find the ending slightly disappointing but on the whole the book was highly entertaining.

Query. Why is Martin Edwards so well regarded when he can write like this in his introduction?
'He was born in Putney in 1907, but left school at 15,'