On my morning commute
On my morning commute
I liked this book; I didn‘t love it, but I do enjoy the writing, and I‘m intrigued enough by our protagonist to continue on with the series. I already have the third book, and it‘s on my July #BookSpin list. Speaking of the list, I finished 11 books from my bingo card, so not a bad month at all. I also read an additional book in the Lynley series that wasn‘t on my bingo card.
Back to the Dalgliesh series: qualified yay so far.
I‘m finishing one last book from my June #Bookspin list (tagged), then it‘s on to July. I‘ve included a couple of library books I‘ve had forever, in the hopes I can get them read; a bunch of mysteries from various series that I‘m reading; and a couple of miscellaneous books from my own stacks. I‘ve been reading up a storm, and I got to both my #bookspin and my #doublespin, so it was a good month. Cleanup posts forthcoming!
More interesting than the first one, rather suspenseful end.
Other commenters mention that Dalgliesh is very undeveloped - we do get some odd details here and there but not much of a personality.
Lots of outdated mental health treatments - not as horrific as it could be though because the setting is a clinic rich pampered people pay to go to.
Published in 1963, this is early P. D. James. It took me a bit to get into it, but then it got my attention. I like her later works better, but this was a good introduction to Dalgliesh. #bookspin @TheAromaofBooks
“I should be relieved if I could produce even an evangelical curate to vouch for me between six-fifteen and seven o‘clock yesterday evening.” 😂
Starting my #bookspin selection this morning. I‘ve read other Dalgliesh novels, but this is much earlier in the series than those I‘ve read before. @TheAromaofBooks
A murder at a psychiatric clinic. If you like PD James or similar detective novels (eg Ruth Rendell's Wexford series), it is worth a read, but it is definitely not one of her best. That said, not her best is still pretty good. ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Read on Kindle. The cover from the first edition is, maybe inappropriately, hilarious while also rather spooky too.
A great second book in the Adam Dalgliesh series. I learned a little more about Dalgliesh‘s background and there was a surprise twist at the very end!
#13books13weeks Book 4
The Steen Clinic is a very posh place to be treated for your problems. They only accept a few chosen patients. When the administrator is murdered during night hours, Adam Dagliesh is called in. The murder weapon points to the handyman, the art left to a patient, and her poorer relation works as a nurse there. There is no shortage of suspects. Dagliesh must wade through motives, opportunities, lies, and loves to get to the heart of it all.
And speaking of reading more in the series, I was able to polish off this one (left half done when Oyster tanked) since my library has been expanding its ebook selection on Overdrive. I feel like this has a much tighter plot and even Dalgliesh missed a crucial clue to put him in the same place as the reader. Doesn't help solve the age issue since this one comes only 3 years after the first.
I love British police novels, but this one just didn't grab me the way the genre normally does. It was pretty good but not great.
Dalgleish number 2. A good enough whodunnit in the classic traditon but nothing special.