I, RICHARD, Elizabeth George
2002, five longish stories/novellas, mostly suspensers although there is one Lynley story. Read on Kindle; four-stars over-all.
"Exposure"
— Lynley visits his irascible auntie's great mansion In The County, at a time when tourists are being entertained. One of them gets murdered in a manner that is blatantly hinted at right from the beginning, which mainly concerns itself with setting the stage of interactions between the members of the tour group. It feels as though Lynley is an afterthought, alas. And the ending/solution was meant to be a strong twist, but falls rather flat. Almost-three-stars.
"The Surprise of His Life"
— Now this is rather better, an almost PI-sort of story about a wealthy older man with a young-and-beautiful wife who may, or may not, be playing around with his younger brother. It's got lots of extraneous threads that ought to confuse but don't, indeed they help to set the scene (ritzy Southern California beachfront properties and the small poor towns around them). Entirely with his first-person viewpoint, it works well, and this meant-to-be-cute, twisted ending, while very predictable, is rather better done than the one in the first story, although for my liking it was far too fast at the end as was the other one, and it was completely predictable, alas.. Atmosphere, et al, was pretty good, and while I was actually reading it I was entertained, but, upon reflection, didn't like it much afterwards. Three-stars.
"Good Fences Aren't Always Enough"
— A very nice neighborhood has a house purchased by a very strange old woman. Interesting take on NIMBY attitudes among upwardly mobile younger couples with families towards an admittedly odd old woman who simply "doesn't fit in" anywhere amongst them. And when she is discovered to have one extremely unusual hobby, well, then the fat's in the fire! What the neighbors do, and how she responds, is beautifully, heart-breakingly depicted, with terrific atmospherics and very good characterizations. And the overall impact of the story is reminiscent of Stephen King. Four-stars.
"Remember, I'll Always Love You"
— A rich suburban Californian wife buries her husband, unexpectedly dead at the age of forty-two in an accident. As she cleans up all the details surrounding this (including legal and financial) she discovers that he was not at all the man she thought he was, nor the man he'd told her he was, nor, possibly, even the man he wanted to be. Not a Witness Protection story btw, but a beautifully filled-out plot with lots of nuances and threads that weave around and in-between each other. A very long story but terrific all the way. Entirely - and beautifully - written from the wife's viewpoint as she goes over their past together, especially the recent past, and tries to figure out just *who* she was married to. And the ramifications and/or consequences of their life together are stunningly told, almost perfectly rendered here. I don't much like George's manner of ending stories - she often just throws out "a good line", perhaps a final twist too, and then "boom!" - end, and it feels far too abrupt. She's written a similar sort of ending here as well, but her twist at the end of this story works much better. It's a truly unexpected zinger, yet makes perfect sense within the story and ties everything up very nicely. Four-and-a-half-stars.
"I, Richard"
— Duplicitous historian woos a woman with A Legacy concerning Richard III (his specialty). Once she's thoroughly under his thumb (she arranges for her lout of a husband to die) he figures he's got it made - she'll give him the legacy (for nothing is too good for him, right??) and he'll be famous - and rich from the sensational book he's writing about Richard III. To finish it off and make it a spectacular success he only needs a bit of proof - "The Perryman Legacy" and the death of her husband, Bernie Perryman, should get it for him, via her. But not so fast.....
Beautifully written novella, only marred by the actual last line, alas. Again, my taste and Ms. George's don't seem to sync - I'd hoped the ending would have a sly and edgy enough twist to complement the long story. It's a good ending, but it's a bit of a let-down, well, at least for me it was. Excellent story, most of it. Four stars.