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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Wednesday, October 8, 2014
Lament for a Maker: Mini-Review
At the heart of the book is the death of the eccentric recluse Ranald Guthrie the laird of Erchany who falls from the ramparts of his castle on a wild winter night. Suspicion initially rests on the young man who wished to marry Guthrie's niece, but the stories told by each of our narrators prove that there is more to the events of Christmas Eve than meets the eye. Did Guthrie commit suicide in the hopes of ruining the young man? Who was the shadowy figure seen by Miss Guthrie, the American cousin? Why was Guthrie's man Hardcastle looking for the Doctor when Miss Guthrie and Noel Gylby (stranded travelers in a snowstorm) approached Erchany? It will take the narratives of five people involved in the mystery to put all the pieces of the puzzle together. Each time Appleby thinks the picture has been completed, another handful of puzzle pieces are brought to the table.
Worth reading for the mystery itself, but not, to my mind, one of Innes' absolute best. I've rated Death at the President's Lodgings, The Weight of the Evidence, and The Long Farewell each higher. I did enjoy being fooled by the final twist and I found the narrative threads by Noel Gylby and Appleby to be the most entertaining. Overall: ★★★
This fulfills the "Pseudonymous Author" square on the Golden Vintage Bingo Square and gives me an eighth Bingo. Michael Innes is the pen name of J. I. M. (John Innes MacKintosh) Stewart a Lecturer in English at the University of Leeds from 1930-35 and, later, a Professor at Oxford.
6 comments:
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It is ages since I read an Innes. Your review wants me to pick one immediately.
ReplyDeleteI like twists! Sounds like an intriguing mystery. Great review!
ReplyDeleteArduous is exactly the word I would use to describe my experience with this book. That Scottish dialect drove me nuts! I tried twice to read this book and I never made to page 100 either time. I like THE DAFFODIL MYSTERY a lot which comes much later in Innes' mystery writing career. It's one of the strangest detective novels ever written, more of a fantasy thriller so it may not appeal to a lot of readers who have purist tastes in detective fiction.
ReplyDeleteJohn, that dialect nearly defeated me. But I kept telling myself that there were clearer passages ahead and kept on wading through the murk. Not a book that I'm likely to read again....
ReplyDeleteBev, I must admit that Lament for a Maker is about my favorite. I wasn't put off by the accent, but then I tend to enjoy Scottish things, songs and dialect. I thought using successive narrators, a la "Moonstone," worked very well in peeling off layer after layer of the mystery. And the learned rats were every bit as surreal as The Daffodil Affair (John, sorry if you didn't get to the rats... ;-)
ReplyDeleteLes: It's possible that the accent might have gone down better when I was younger (I know I read some mysteries with heavy dialects then and wasn't as bothered by it). I may be getting crotchety in my old age. ;-)
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