Mystery Lover...but overall a very eclectic reader. Will read everything from the classics to historical fiction. Biography to essays. Not into horror or much into YA. If you would like me to review a book, then please see my stated review policy BEFORE emailing me. Please Note: This is a book blog. It is not a platform for advertising. Please do NOT contact me to ask that I promote your NON-book websites or products. Thank you.
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Thursday, September 19, 2013
The Dreadful Hollow: Review
A poison pen has been sending nasty letters to the inhabitants of Prior's Umborne. A small village where Sir Archibald Blick has a family residence--and where his two sons currently live. It is also home to one of Blick's business interests. Blick calls on Strangeways to get to the bottom of the poison because it's disrupting work. Also living in the village are two sisters, Rosebay and Celedine--the daughters of a man who committed suicide when Blick drove him to financial ruin, the local vicar--stalwart friend to Rosebay and Celedine, who harbors deeper feelings for one of the sisters, and the postmistress and her religiously obsessed son. Strangeways barely has a chance to make his first report to the unlikable businessman before Blick is found dead at the bottom of the same hollow where Rosebay and Celedine's father died.
This is a well-written, competent book as you expect from a poet laureate. It is not as cleverly mystifying as some of Blake's other work and there isn't quite as much intricate psychology. Not that there isn't any psychology at work--there is. It's just a bit more obvious. The tale does involve one rather interesting, somewhat macabre dream which makes the story all that more apropos for the R. I. P. Reading Event. It doesn't take Strangeways long to spot the poison pen....and it shouldn't. The alert reader should spot the culprit just as quickly. It also doesn't take long to spot the murderer. That may or may not be the same person.....
The joy for the reader is in the writing itself. Blake/Lewis knows how to tell a tale. And he knows how to write. The reader is swept right along in the swell of words. It's with a nod and wink--not a snort of disgust--that we know who did it long before the end. And it is well worth the trip to read the ending at the quarry--with the contrast of Strangeway's calm knowledge to the angry mob ready to lynch the culprit. Three and a half stars--rounded to four on Goodreads.
2 comments:
Sorry folks, but I have been getting an incredible amount of spam. I have adjusted my settings and all messages will be moderated from now on. If that does not take care of the problem then I will have to go to the "Prove You're Not a Robot" thing--which I hate as much as you do.
If your name does not appear automatically, please tell me your name in the comment. Otherwise you will just show up as "Unknown." Thanks!
Not an author I've read before, and not sure if I ever will. But I really do enjoy your reviews because it gives me a great idea of where to look for new books.
ReplyDeletethanks, Ryan!
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