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The Suffocating Night: The Lydmouth Crime Series Book 4
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
The Suffocating Night: The Lydmouth Crime Series Book 4
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Andrew Taylor
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Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:384 | Dimensions(mm): Height 179,Width 111 |
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Category/Genre | Crime and mystery |
ISBN/Barcode |
9780340695982
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Classifications | Dewey:823.914 |
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Audience | |
Illustrations |
n/a
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Hodder & Stoughton
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Imprint |
Hodder Paperback
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Publication Date |
26 May 2003 |
Publication Country |
United Kingdom
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Description
When squatters occupy a disused military camp near Lydmouth, public opinion is divided: do they really need shelter or are they merely unpatriotic scroungers and Communist sympathisers When a man is found murdered in the Bathurst Arms, Detective Inspector Richard Thornhill has no shortage of suspects. One of them is Philip Wemyss-Brown, editor of the Lydmouth Gazette - and friend and employer of Jill Francis. Once again, Jill and Richard pursue the same answers for conflicting reasons. This time, however, they have a second problem to solve, and this one is even more personal . . .
Author Biography
Andrew Taylor has worked as a boatbuilder, wages clerk, librarian, labourer and publisher's reader. He has written many crime novels as well as children's books and lives with his wife and their two children in the Forest of Dean, on the borders of England and Wales..
Reviews'The latest of Andrew Taylor's Lydmouth series of books, in which he has so effectively created the atmosphere of the 1950s...as usual with Taylor's stories, there is more to the puzzle than is immediately apparent. It's another satisfying read, in which the characters are as importants as the events and tension develops naturally, without contrivance' - Susanna Yager, Sunday Telegraph 'Andrew Taylor does not fall into the trap of mistaking drama for melodrama. Nor does he suffer from the insecure urge to say too much. Understatement is the rule of his Lydmouth novels, set in the Fifties and evoking the post-war restraint of that era without allowing anyone to notice quite how skilfully he re-creates the atmosphere of the time through innuendo, attitude and detail rather than dogged description... Taylor is the master of the small lives writ large and, in the phrase coined in this era of surly pubs and poor food, he has carved a detective story whch is deceptively calm and cool, but really smashing' Frances Fyfield, The Express 'Excellent classic mystery set in early 1950s Lydmouth' - The Guardian 'Marvellously creepy' Frances Fyfield, Mail on Sunday 'All the ingredients of a classic murder mystery...an excellent whodunnit that keeps you guessing right until the end' - Yorkshire Evening Post 'Taylor is an excellent writer' -- Times 'How skilfully he recreates the atmosphere of the time through innuendo, attitude and detail rather than dogged description... Taylor is the master of small lives writ large and, in the phrase coined in this era of surly pubs and poor food, he has carved a classic detective story which is deceptively calm and cool, but really smashing' -- Frances Fyfield, Express "The latest of Andrew Taylor's Lydmouth series of books, in which he has so effectively created the atmosphere of the 1950s, with its genteel drabness and carefully preserved hierarchy of relationships ... Is another satisfying read, in which the characters are as important as the events and tension develops naturally without contrivance.' -- Susanna Yager, Sunday Telegraph 'Marvellously creepy' -- Frances Fyfield, Mail on Sunday
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