Reading the Detectives discussion

This topic is about
The China Governess
Archive: Albert Campion reads
>
The China Governess (1962) SPOILER Thread
date
newest »



Ok, I like Jill’s retelling of the book better then the original- I just don’t find the later campion books work for me. I miss Lugg, not enough campion, and the audiobook narrator gives Charlie Luke a rather loud, obnoxious cockney accent. Nothing against Cockneys, it’s just rather shrill and distracting. And I wasn’t sure if I was supposed to suspect Nanny Broome of something nefarious, she was by turns cunning and fey.
From the two disparate story lines right from the beginning - a destructive housebreaking vs. young lovers vs. the wacky nanny vs. the old family story of some murderous nanny from decades previous - ok, I guess there were actually four or five stories churning about - I wasn’t quite sure what was going on, and didn’t really care.
I did find the descriptions of the evacuation of London before the Blitz very evocative, though - I often come away feeling Allingham was a frustrated novelist. There are so many quirky, interesting characters, like the councilor and his heartbreaking story, and beautiful, descriptive writing - I feel if she chucked the detective bit and wrote the books she wanted to write, it would have been a real treat!

Yes. I have thought there was more to her than Campion
Susan in NC wrote: "From the two disparate story lines right from the beginning - a destructive housebreaking vs. young lovers vs. the wacky nanny vs. the old family story of some murderous nanny from decades previous ..."
I wonder if perhaps the story from the past being paralleled in the present day was a bit more unusual then? We have had a lot of dual timelines and mysteries with an old murder and a current one in more recent years.
I wonder if perhaps the story from the past being paralleled in the present day was a bit more unusual then? We have had a lot of dual timelines and mysteries with an old murder and a current one in more recent years.
I was sad that Charlie Luke is already a widower in this book - I think we only glimpsed him and Prune during their courtship and now she has died.
The whole way she died seemed rather unlikely - surely the fiercely protective Luke would be making sure someone checked on her all the time and there wouldn't be much chance of her going through labour without help.
I slightly wondered if Allingham was thinking of another future romance for Luke as she possibly built him into the main character in Campion's place?
The whole way she died seemed rather unlikely - surely the fiercely protective Luke would be making sure someone checked on her all the time and there wouldn't be much chance of her going through labour without help.
I slightly wondered if Allingham was thinking of another future romance for Luke as she possibly built him into the main character in Campion's place?

Good point, hadn’t thought about it, seems like a common trope nowadays.

The whole way she died seemed rather unlikely -..."
Yes, that struck me as odd, also - and the way characters talk about not having approved of her as his wife, almost seem critical of her for dying in childbirth!
Susan in NC wrote: "Yes, that struck me as odd, also - and the way characters talk about not having approved of her as his wife, almost seem critical of her for dying in childbirth!..."
Yes, that was really odd - I never really got Campion's objection to her as a wife for Charlie in the first place. He seems to think it's a problem that she has an aristocratic background, even though he does himself.
Yes, that was really odd - I never really got Campion's objection to her as a wife for Charlie in the first place. He seems to think it's a problem that she has an aristocratic background, even though he does himself.

I am glad she didn't pursue that theme. It was something I dislike in series with a hero, who will court and marry during one book, and start the next with a dead wife, so he is free to court again!

I don't know if Luke will find love in the next couple of books - I haven't read them. But at least he wasn't being susceptible in this one!

I don't know if Luke will find love in the next couple of books - I haven't read them. But at least he was..."
Oh sorry I thought you were talking about this series

I don't know if Luke will find love in the next couple of books - I haven't read them. But ..."
It was particularly noticeable in action series (like Sharpe, and the large number of Napoleonic Naval sagas, like Hornblower). Wives and girlfriends being abandoned or killed just to free up the hero for more 'romance'.

I don't know if Luke will find love in the next couple of books - I haven't re..."
Yes It seemed Sharp was always jumping into bed with women and wanting to marry them


I also wondered how much money the Kinnit's actually had-it was implied that they had a lot, but they were living with no servants and no cook-ordering all their meals from the local pub was quite comical!

They would have been spoiled for choice these days, with all the food available through UberEats and the other providers!


It took quite a while to see what the different storylines had to do with each other. The whole business of young lovers eloping----but he leaves her in a spooky house with his old nanny--- was difficult to follow.
Timothy Kinnit is rich, handsome and well-bred. He seems to have everything. Then, on the eve of his elopement, he learns that he was adopted, and he is desperate to know who he really is. Someone seems no less keen to stop him finding out. Violence, deception and death bedevil the post-war housing estate that has grown from the ashes of the notorious Turk Street Mile, and the shadow of a long-forgotten murder hangs over it all - until Luke and Campion are finally able to dispel the darkness.
Please feel free to post spoilers in this thread.