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Angela Misri

Auteur de Jewel of the Thames

7 oeuvres 70 utilisateurs 11 critiques

Séries

Œuvres de Angela Misri

Jewel of the Thames (2014) 49 exemplaires
No Matter How Improbable (2016) 6 exemplaires
Thrice Burned (2017) 4 exemplaires
Pickles vs. the Zombies (2019) 4 exemplaires
The Detective and the Spy (2020) 4 exemplaires
Trip of the Dead (2021) 1 exemplaire

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Critiques

I KNEW IT. That is all I will say for now, but I KNEW IT. Ha!

Also, I sincerely hope more adventures will come about soon.



Confession time I'm not a huge Sherlockian. I'm actually rather the opposite--I was always more in the Hercule Poirot camp of quirky male detectives that most people find obnoxious. BBC's show (and Benedict Cumberbatch's cheekbones) however convinced me I was being too hard on the fellow. When I received an email asking if I'd be interested in reviewing Jewel of the Thames (as part of Portia's blog tour) it came just as I finished episode 3 of the show and I wasn't ready to let go. Really not ready to let go. Have you seen season 3? No? You'll see why I wasn't ready to let go.

Broken into 3 cases, each building on the last as Portia's journey towards the truth unravels. Misri does Portia a great service by not making her instantly perfect. While she definitely has a keen eye, quick intellect and charming personality she's still young and not immune to the fallacies of that youth. For instance in the second case she only stumbles upon the truth through happenstance and luck while in the first case it takes a lot of leg work and cunning an the third case a combination of the two.

Portia is immediately likeable. She's practical, humble and tries hard to not let herself become entangled in things. In many ways she was like Holmes--the minutiae of the day didn't bog her down, she was always concerned with the larger focus. Unlike Holmes she does understand the need for social niceties and proves herself very capable of steering between the upper crusty sorts to the Scotland Yard detectives she runs into occasionally.

Those surrounding her--from her mysterious benefactor to the couple who took over 221 Baker Street to the detective who is incredulous about her abilities are all engaging. Even the "villains" prove to be delightful as they offer Portia a chance to test her mettle as an amateur detective determined to take up with Holmes and Watson left off.

I will say that sometimes the nature of the cases threw off the pacing of the underlying plot. While the individual stories were well paced, the cases themselves were written almost as connected individual short stories so at times the flow of time felt stiff. Also I found it a little bit outside the ordinary that so much happened to her in so short a time, but then as any fan of detective shows or stories can tell you the amateur detective has a knack for attracting dangerous situations.

JEWEL OF THE THAMES is a well paced mystery that felt genuine and made me try to figure out what was going on. Some details of Portia's shrouded family past are rather obvious, but watching her piece together the clues was amusing. Especially when she figured out who her ahem guardian was. I definitely can't wait to see what happens next and I certainly hope to see more of Brian Dawes (though I'm okay with him only being a friend and not a love interest, I like their easy banter and companionability).
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Signalé
lexilewords | 6 autres critiques | Dec 28, 2023 |
Absolutely, 100% adored this follow up to THE JEWEL OF THE THAMES. There's so much to appreciate in Misri's book--the evolution of the character relationships and motivations, the honest feelings expressed and for my part my unparalleled appreciation for how...hmm maturely several character dynamics are handled goes a long way to proving Portia's personality.
 
Signalé
lexilewords | 1 autre critique | Dec 28, 2023 |
There's a lot of Sherlock spin-offs on the market these days and this is yet another one, comprising three novellas in one book. This might be interesting for anyone obsessed with Sir Doyle's clever works but I was too bored to even read it all the way through, skipping to the end (which was, unsurprisingly, predictable).
 
Signalé
fionaanne | 6 autres critiques | Nov 11, 2021 |
More of a three point five; I enjoyed it, but found the writing a little too slow-moving in places and jumpy in others. The stories were fun, though, and Portia is quite endearing. I'd read another installment for sure.
 
Signalé
sdramsey | 6 autres critiques | Dec 14, 2020 |

Prix et récompenses

Statistiques

Œuvres
7
Membres
70
Popularité
#248,179
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
11
ISBN
18

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