Reviews

Invisible is a great thriller. I can’t say too much more about the plot because the twists and turns are the whole point of reading a book that wrong foots the reader at every turn . . . Christine Poulson kept me reading by giving out just enough information to intrigue and puzzle so that I had to read just one more chapter. That’s why, in the end, I just dropped everything else and read the last half of Invisible in one sitting.’

- I PREFER READING BLOG

My idea of a treat

t_ISBN_9780712309936A glass of wine on a Saturday evening and Young Montalbano or a slice of Scandi-noir on the box? Absolutely! Chocolate? Of course, as long as it is dark and expensive. A meal out (or cooked by someone else) is always welcome. Flowers? I love flowers and often buy them for myself.

And yet when all is said and done, there isn’t much to beat buying a brand-new paperback that you’ve been longing for – and that was what I did in the Sheffield branch of Waterstone’s last Saturday. Murder at the Manor: Country House Mysteries, edited by my friend, Martin Edwards, is the latest in the spectacularly successful series of British Library Crime Classics.

I have loved the Golden Age short story ever since I bought a copy of Tales of Detection, chosen by Dorothy L Sawyers (1936), many years ago in a second-hand bookshop in Oxford. In Murder at the Manor, Martin has managed to come up with some crackers, many of which I haven’t read before. Who wouldn’t want to read a story with the title, ‘The Horror at Stavely Grange’ (by Sapper) – or ‘The Unlocked Window’ by Ethel Lina White, which opens like this:

‘Have you locked up, Nurse Cherry?’

‘Yes, Nurse Silver.’

‘Every door, every window?’

‘Yes, yes.’

Yet even as she shot home the last bolt of the front door, at the back of Nurse Cherry’s mind was a vague misgiving.

She had forgotten – something.’

Blimey! They certainly knew how to cut to the chase in those days. I’m rationing myself so that I don’t gulp the stories down all at once. I’m glad I won’t be on my own this evening when I plan to read this one.

 

5 Comments

  1. Lyn
    February 3, 2016

    I have this on the tbr shelves & I’m looking forward to it. One story a day sounds like a very good idea.

    Reply
    • Christine Poulson
      February 3, 2016

      Mmm . . . not sure about keeping to just one! But I’m trying not to read more two at a time.

      Reply
  2. moira @ClothesInBooks
    February 5, 2016

    I totally understand and agree, though my treat would be a full-length crime book. And if it’s a really great one, this happens: As I approach the last chapters, the final sixth, say, I put it down. Then, I go and make coffee or tea, collect a biscuit, draw the curtains, arrange seat, cushions, throw for maximum comfort – and only then sit down to enjoy the ending. But that’s only worth doing for the best books….

    Reply
    • Christine Poulson
      February 6, 2016

      So much enjoyed this glimpse in the reading life chez Moira. It is best if there is no-one else in the house to interrupt at a crucial moment, isn’t it? and it’s especially enjoyable, I find, if you really ought to be doing something else. Do you also save up books that you know you are going to love, so that you can enjoy the cosy feeling of knowing that you have them in store?

      Reply
      • Moira, Clothes in Books
        February 6, 2016

        Not just save up – use as incentive. When I’ve done x and y, or even read some books that are duty or work, THEN I can read the book I know I’ll love…

        Reply

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