The Beast Must Die (Nigel Strangeways #4)
Clever mystery with plenty of twists. I did suspect the guilty party at several points and was strongly tempted to skip to the end & check but refrained. I'm glad I didn't cheat because Blake (or Cecil Day-Lewis to use his real name) did keep me second guessing myself and threw several very plausible red herrings across the trail. I would recommend it to any fans of the Golden Age mysteries such as those written by Agatha Christie, Margerie Allingham, Josephine Tey, Rex Stout, etc. One thing
Kindle Unlimited Free Trial | Very well written, but heartbreaking. | The quality of this was as good as the other books of Blake's I've read, but so many characters began in pain, continued in pain, and would go on in their lives in pain, that I couldn't take as much pleasure in it. Again, I had an idea of the solution, but I wasn't completely certain until close to the end, so I'm impressed by the plotting.
A writer whose son is hit and killed by a motorist plans to murder his son's murderer. Reason, logic, and coincidence drag him with seeming inevitability toward the truth...I liked this, but I've been reading enough mystery novels that I got to the end of the writer's diary and went, "Aha." The twist was excellent - but there was only one major one, and if you have it, you have it. The individual elements of the story were all pretty good, though, so I don't regret finishing it.
A true classic mystery novel. Full review at classicmystery.wordpress.com
A great read. I want to read more of this series.
Nicholas Blake
Paperback | Pages: 260 pages Rating: 3.85 | 1151 Users | 101 Reviews
Point Epithetical Books The Beast Must Die (Nigel Strangeways #4)
Title | : | The Beast Must Die (Nigel Strangeways #4) |
Author | : | Nicholas Blake |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Pan Classic Crime |
Pages | : | Pages: 260 pages |
Published | : | April 9th 1999 by Pan Classic Crime (first published 1938) |
Categories | : | Mystery. Crime. Fiction. Detective |
Representaion As Books The Beast Must Die (Nigel Strangeways #4)
The book starts off with the diary of Frank, who addressing the reader tells us that he is going to kill the man who ran over his son. The diary stops at the point where Frank is supposed to kill the person responsible but he fails and the yet the other person turns up dead anyways and Nigel Strangeways is invited over to investigate. The book is well written and intriguing, I haven't really read anything similar but I had a hard time getting into it. I think the writing felt a little dry and the way Nigel solves the mystery seems dubious to me. I usually don't really like mysteries very much anyway but I think someone who's a fan of them would enjoy this one much more than I did.Declare Books During The Beast Must Die (Nigel Strangeways #4)
Original Title: | The Beast Must Die |
ISBN: | 0330373218 (ISBN13: 9780330373210) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | Nigel Strangeways #4 |
Rating Epithetical Books The Beast Must Die (Nigel Strangeways #4)
Ratings: 3.85 From 1151 Users | 101 ReviewsComment On Epithetical Books The Beast Must Die (Nigel Strangeways #4)
The book starts off with the diary of Frank, who addressing the reader tells us that he is going to kill the man who ran over his son. The diary stops at the point where Frank is supposed to kill the person responsible but he fails and the yet the other person turns up dead anyways and Nigel Strangeways is invited over to investigate. The book is well written and intriguing, I haven't really read anything similar but I had a hard time getting into it. I think the writing felt a little dry andClever mystery with plenty of twists. I did suspect the guilty party at several points and was strongly tempted to skip to the end & check but refrained. I'm glad I didn't cheat because Blake (or Cecil Day-Lewis to use his real name) did keep me second guessing myself and threw several very plausible red herrings across the trail. I would recommend it to any fans of the Golden Age mysteries such as those written by Agatha Christie, Margerie Allingham, Josephine Tey, Rex Stout, etc. One thing
Kindle Unlimited Free Trial | Very well written, but heartbreaking. | The quality of this was as good as the other books of Blake's I've read, but so many characters began in pain, continued in pain, and would go on in their lives in pain, that I couldn't take as much pleasure in it. Again, I had an idea of the solution, but I wasn't completely certain until close to the end, so I'm impressed by the plotting.
A writer whose son is hit and killed by a motorist plans to murder his son's murderer. Reason, logic, and coincidence drag him with seeming inevitability toward the truth...I liked this, but I've been reading enough mystery novels that I got to the end of the writer's diary and went, "Aha." The twist was excellent - but there was only one major one, and if you have it, you have it. The individual elements of the story were all pretty good, though, so I don't regret finishing it.
A true classic mystery novel. Full review at classicmystery.wordpress.com
A great read. I want to read more of this series.
0 Comments