English Mysteries Club discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
Book of the Month pre-2020
>
June 2014
date
newest »


I'd also like to nominate Elly Griffith's most recent: The Outcast Dead, which I hope to read soon.




In WICKED AUTUMN, G.M. Malliet serves up an irresistible English village—deliciously skewered—a flawed but likeable protagonist, and a brilliantly modern version of the traditional drawing room mystery.
One of Library Journal's Best Mystery Books of 2011




Penny, what was the TV series called? I would like to see if it is on dvds.

It is called "Scott & Bailey" -- I just started watching it a few months ago on my PBS channel.


sorry Diane - I didnt get back to reply but Leslie stepped in with what you needed!

Thanks. My local PBS channel isn't showing it yet. Meanwhile, there's always the books.
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
Dead to Me (other topics)Dead to Me (other topics)
Dead to Me (other topics)
Wicked Autumn (other topics)
The Mysterious Affair at Styles (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
G.M. Malliet (other topics)Reginald Hill (other topics)
Murder in the Maze
"After both Roger and Neville Shandon are felled in Whistlefield's famous hedge maze by curare-tipped darts, Sir Clinton [Driffield] arrives to restore order at this fractious country estate. Sir Clinton's performance as a criminal investigator is dazzlingly acute and the novel boasts several bravura scenes, all centering on the sinister hedge maze of death. Surely Murder in the Maze is one of the very finest country house mysteries produced by a British detective novelist in the 1920s. . . . No less a literary figure than T. S. Eliot praised Murder in the Maze in The Criterion for its plot construction . . . and its narrative liveliness . . . deeming it 'a really first-rate detective story.' . . . [I]n his 1946 critical essay, 'The Grandest Game in the World,' the great locked room detective author John Dickson Carr echoed Eliot's assessment of the novel's virtuoso setting, writing: 'These 1920s . . . thronged with sheer brains. What would be one of the best possible settings for violent death? J. J. Connington found the answer, with Murder in the Maze.'" (From the Introduction.)