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Behind Closed Doors (The Beatrice Stubbs…
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Behind Closed Doors (The Beatrice Stubbs Series Book 1) (original 2010; édition 2013)

par JJ Marsh (Auteur)

Séries: Beatrice Stubbs (1)

MembresCritiquesPopularitéÉvaluation moyenneMentions
413608,515 (3.63)4
Suicide ?? the act of taking one??s own life. Homicide ?? the act of taking someone else??s. An unethical banker suffocates. A diamond dealer slits his wrists. A media magnate freezes in the snow. A disgraced CEO inhales exhaust fumes. Four unpopular businessmen, four apparent suicides. Until Interpol find the same DNA at each death.Beatrice Stubbs, on her first real case since ??the incident??, arrives in Switzerland to lead the investigation. But there??s more to Zurich than chocolate and charm. Potential suspects are everywhere, her Swiss counterpart is hostile and the secretive world of international finance seems beyond the law. Battling impossible odds by day and her own demons at night, Beatrice has never felt so alone. She isn??t. Someone??s watching.Someone else who believes i… (plus d'informations)
Membre:Birta
Titre:Behind Closed Doors (The Beatrice Stubbs Series Book 1)
Auteurs:JJ Marsh (Auteur)
Info:Prewett Bielmann Ltd. (2013), 303 pages
Collections:Votre bibliothèque
Évaluation:****
Mots-clés:spring 21

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Behind Closed Doors par JJ Marsh (2010)

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'Behind Closed Doors' is the first book in the Beatrice Stubbs European crime series, which currently stands at twelve books. If I assess this book the way I would a pilot for a TV series, then I'd rate it as very successful. The book was entertaining, the people were interesting, the locations were pretty, the plot was twisty and I'm intrigued by Beatrice Stubbs. I'd cheerfully sign up to watch the rest of the series. This is just as well, as I bought the first three books in an omnibus edition.

The premise of the book is that Beatrice Stubbs, a Detective Inspector at Scotland Yard, is assigned to lead an international team drawn from Interpol, Europol and the Swiss Police, to establish whether or not the apparent suicide of a number of unpopular prominent businessmen, spread out over several years and in multiple countries, are linked and if so, were they really suicides. This will be Beatrice's first high-profile case since an (initially unspecified) incident a year earlier. Her team will be hosted by the Swiss Police in Zurich. We know from early on that the suicides were really murders. As the book progresses, we continually flip from the activities of the investigation team to witnessing a murder ingeniously being made to look like a suicide.

The plot was clever enough to keep me guessing but, despite some of the murders being fairly gruesome, there was very little tension in the book until the final few chapters. I found I rather liked that. I wasn't being driven through a thriller at breakneck speed, I was being given time to observe and speculate and enjoy the people and the scenery.

What I liked most was how well JJ Marsh describes what it's like when you bring experts from different countries together and try to form them into a team to achieve a task. I spent a lot of my career doing that and I think JJ Marsh captures all the little problems that arise from clashing cultural expectations and competing egos. She also does a credible job of showing how to get past these difficulties. I thought that JJ Marsh did an equally good job in capturing the feel of the locations in the book, especially Zurich, which is a city I know well.

I liked the humour in the book, much of which was based on how the members of the team learn to get on with one another and deal with cultural and personal differences. Here's an example. Beatrice has gone with Herr Kälin, the most senior Swiss officer on the team, to a polo match (the kind of thing only the very wealthy attend) to interview a suspect. Herr Kälin is Swiss-German, senior and habitually quite formal (by English standards) in his interactions. While waiting for the suspect, Herr Kälin suggests that they get a drink at one of the refreshment tables. When she tastes the drink, Beatrice is surprised...

“Herr Kälin, this is champagne.”
“Correct, Frau Stubbs. Let us toast your skills of observation.”
“We are on duty, you know. I prefer to keep a clear head when trying to needle someone. For an interview, I mean. I hardly think alcohol is appropriate.”
“The police line is, ‘Ein Glas ist OK’, so I plan to stick to that. And it is a quality brand, don’t you think?”
Beatrice took another sip. It was rather good.
“And it is polite in Swiss society, as in most civilised countries in the world, to toast one another before drinking. Cheers, Frau Stubbs.”
“Cheers, Herr Kälin. Thank you for the tip. Here’s one for you. In Britain, we tend not to advise other people on how to behave.”
“True. You give no advice and then despise foreigners for not knowing the rules. It is a mystery to me why the British have no word for Schadenfreude.”


I enjoyed the humour. It's the kind of exchange I'm very familiar with and it's typical of the ways in which JJ Marsh develops the relationships between her characters.

One of the things that differentiates this series is that Beatrice Stubbs is managing her bipolar disorder. This gives her a very particular way of managing herself and shapes the way she works with her team. It seemed to me that the structure of the narrative echoed Beatrice's bipolarity. The descriptions of the murders are cold, clinical and disturbing. The descriptions of the investigation are filled with people trying to show empathy for each other and to collaborate in a friendly and effective way. In my head, I was imagining that the TV version of this would use a cold colour palette and static cameras for the murders and a warm colour palette and handheld cameras for most of the investigation.

I listened to the audiobook version of 'Behind Closed Doors'. I was impressed by how well the narrator, Jill Prewett, captured the accents from the different nationalities and gave each member of the team a voice I could instantly recognise so I checked her bio. It turns out that Jill Prewett writes under the name JJ Marsh, so this is one of those examples of an author who does a great job of narrating their own work. Click on the SoundCloud link below to hear a sample.

https://soundcloud.com/jj-marsh-author/behind-closed-doors-audiobook-sample?utm_... ( )
  MikeFinnFiction | Dec 31, 2021 |
When Interpol find the same DNA at several suicide deaths a team is formed to determine the facts. Beatrice Stubbs a Scotland Yard detective arrives in Switzerland to head the team.
It was an interesting enough premise, but I didn't think that the dialogue always flowed and I was not totally convinced with the characters. I much prefer to find the guilty party right on the last page.
A NetGalley Book ( )
  Vesper1931 | Jul 29, 2021 |
I thoroughly enjoyed my ‘boxed set’ of 3 titles by JJ Marsh. The ‘set’ consisted of the first 3 books in Ms. Marsh’s Beatrice Stubbs mystery series: BEHIND CLOSED DOORS - RAW MATERIAL - TREAD SOFTLY.
The lead characters were very flawed; very likable; very detailed. Beatrice - bipolar with hints of a prior suicide attempt, Detective Inspector for the Metropolitan Police; her husband Matthew and neighbor Adrian.
The plots were edgy, suspenseful and detailed; very character-driven.
The ‘sense of place’ (which first attracted me to the series) was extremely well-done. I really felt a part of the locations.
BEHIND CLOSED DOORS took place mainly in Zurich, Switzerland. I liked the back and forth of the murder scenes and the current investigations. It helped set the tone and especially the personalities of the victims. I quite liked the development of the team’s characters and Herr Karl Kalin.
RAW MATERIAL was set in UK locations. A seemingly innocent set of photographs from a beach holiday turn into the basis for a major investigation. Adrian and Matthew ‘help out’ on the case.
TREAD SOFTLY was my favorite title mainly because of its northern Spain location. The descriptions - of foods, wines, vineyards, wineries, Spanish cities and towns, people - were superb. The plot was very well-paced which I liked.
I liked these mysteries so much that I ordered the next 3 titles in the Beatrice Stubbs series.
**I do want to note that I didn’t order the ‘boxed set’ - I ordered 3 individual books. The digital ‘set’ titles were awkward to read. There was no access to each title’s table of contents. I like to move around in a book and often reread passages or confirm details. While I could bookmark, I couldn’t maneuver well in the books. This is nothing to do with the writing, but a glitch or problem with the format. ( )
  diana.hauser | Sep 12, 2017 |
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Suicide ?? the act of taking one??s own life. Homicide ?? the act of taking someone else??s. An unethical banker suffocates. A diamond dealer slits his wrists. A media magnate freezes in the snow. A disgraced CEO inhales exhaust fumes. Four unpopular businessmen, four apparent suicides. Until Interpol find the same DNA at each death.Beatrice Stubbs, on her first real case since ??the incident??, arrives in Switzerland to lead the investigation. But there??s more to Zurich than chocolate and charm. Potential suspects are everywhere, her Swiss counterpart is hostile and the secretive world of international finance seems beyond the law. Battling impossible odds by day and her own demons at night, Beatrice has never felt so alone. She isn??t. Someone??s watching.Someone else who believes i

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