Photo de l'auteur

Sheila Radley

Auteur de The Chief Inspector's Daughter

14+ oeuvres 572 utilisateurs 8 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Notice de désambiguation :

(eng) Pseudonym of Sheila Mary Robinson. She also writes under the pen name Hester Rowan.

Séries

Œuvres de Sheila Radley

The Chief Inspector's Daughter (1981) 113 exemplaires
Death in the Morning (1978) 107 exemplaires
Blood on the Happy Highway (1983) 61 exemplaires
Fate Worse Than Death (1985) 58 exemplaires
A Talent for Destruction (1982) 56 exemplaires
Who Saw Him Die? (1987) 55 exemplaires
Cross My Heart & Hope to Die (1602) 52 exemplaires
This Way Out (1989) 49 exemplaires
New Blood From Old Bones (1998) 8 exemplaires
Fair Game (1994) 5 exemplaires
Alpine Encounter (1979) 4 exemplaires
The Linden Tree (2012) 2 exemplaires
Snowfall (1978) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Robinson, Sheila Mary
Autres noms
Rowan, Hester
Date de naissance
1928
Sexe
female
Nationalité
UK
Notice de désambigüisation
Pseudonym of Sheila Mary Robinson. She also writes under the pen name Hester Rowan.

Membres

Critiques

"A terrible series of gales drives through the village of Byland near England's eastern coast. Eventually the storms pass, but they leave behind destruction and fear. An old couple Gladys and Zygmunt Crackjaw, have disappeared. Gladys hasn't been seen in the village in a long time, but the elderly Ziggy bicycled into town every week to buy food and pick up their pensions. The sub-postmistress, Janet Thacker, saw him on Thursday, but no one's seen him since. Now the door to the Crackjaw's house is locked, the pension receipt booklets are on the mantle, and there are some gray hairs and a smear of blood near the fireplace, whee one of the old people may have fallen. The Crackjaws are nowhere to be found.

"With no bodies and no clue to where the Crackjaws might be, Detective Chief Inspector Douglas Quantrill and Sergeant Hilary Lloyd face a virtually unsolvable case. Neither the villagers nor the couple's grown children will admit to knowing anything. And nobody seems to care very much. Quantrill and Lloyd will keep probing until they find some answers -- if only Quantrill and Lloyd can tell fact from fiction.

"In this superbly crafted, heartfelt novel, Radley uses a dual narrative technique to transcend the boundaries of the traditional crime novel, producing a story of poignant, universal appeal."
~~front & back flaps

An excellent plot -- a story within a story that still leaves the reader guessing until the last pages. Beautifully crafted and excellently written, as always. It's a shame Ms. Radley wasn't as prolific as Agatha Christie!
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Aspenhugger | 1 autre critique | Jan 7, 2019 |
"They're back again -- that terrific twosome from Death in the Morning -- Chief Inspector Quantrill, the old-fashioned country police officer, and Martin Tait, the clever, ambitious sergeant with a eye for the ladies.

"When Quantrill's daughter, Alison, returns to her quiet village house after an unhappy love affair in London, she finds a job as secretay to Jasmine Woods, a best-selling author of romantic novels. But one morning Alison finds Jasmine brutally raped and murdered, her valuable collection of jade and netsuke stolen. Quantrill and Tait, who'd warned Jasmine about her collection after an aborted break-in -- and had been attfacted to her -- soon find there is no shortage of suspects. Thee is Rodney Gifford, her cousin, an avant-garde playwright who's had nothing produced in over ten years; her brother-in-law Paul Pardoe, who, with five kids and one of the way, could use the money his wife will inherit; Jonathan Elliott, an intellectual novelist and TV critic, and his wife, Roz, a dedicated feminist; and Gilbert Smith, Jasmine's friend and live-in gardener, a poet and pot smoker who disasspears after the murder, leaving behind some bloodstained clothing. Some people disliked Jasmine's books -- even Quantrill resented the fact that his wife was more roused by Jasmine's fictional heroes than by him -- some envied her money, several had motives, and all of them had the opportunity to ki8ll her.

"Unraveling the strands of the mystery, Quantrill and Tait, who's becoming increasingly interested in Alison, are caught in a tense situation involving their personal and professional obligations. Then Alison, still in shock over Jasmine's death, runs away before giving evidence to Quantrill.

"In a dramatic climax, Alison provides the surprising solution to the murder -- along with a surprising revelation about herself.

"Once again, Sheila Radley has written a totally absorbing story of mystery, love, and death in a small town."
~~front & back covers

I think I'd read this book before, although I didn't remember the plot or characters; I did however remember the author's name and that I had thoroughly enjoyed her books. And I did again,. enough that I'm getting the rest of the series from the library to read them again.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Aspenhugger | 2 autres critiques | Jan 4, 2019 |
This is an excellent series, this one now from Felony and Mayhem.
 
Signalé
Condorena | 2 autres critiques | Apr 2, 2013 |
two unconnected murders. a totally unrealistic crime. men behaving badly.
 
Signalé
mahallett | May 6, 2012 |

Prix et récompenses

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Statistiques

Œuvres
14
Aussi par
2
Membres
572
Popularité
#43,783
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
8
ISBN
98
Langues
4

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