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2021: Organizing the side reads > A November free-for-all side-read

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message 1: by Christine PNW, Agathyte (last edited Sep 30, 2021 01:38PM) (new)

Christine PNW (moonlight_reader) | 1165 comments I'm too tired to come up with a theme for November, so I'm throwing out a chance for an open nomination.

No more than one book per person, when we get to 10 nominations, I'll close & set the poll. All books published before 1970, please!

1. Family Matters by Anthony Rolls; nominated by Tara
2. The Spoilt Kill: A Staffordshire Mystery by Mary Kelly; nominated by Themis-Athena
3. The Port of London Murders by Josephine Bell; nominated by Christine PNW
4. The Feast by Margaret Kennedy; nominated by Mike Finn
5. Sergeant Cluff Stands Firm by Gil North; nominated by Marie.
6. The Unfinished Clue by Georgette Heyer; nominated by Jessica


message 2: by Tara (last edited Aug 31, 2021 05:59PM) (new)

Tara  | 105 comments I'll suggest Family Matters Family Matters by Anthony Rolls by Anthony Rolls:

Robert Arthur Kewdingham is an eccentric failure of a man. In middle age he retreats into a private world, hunting for Roman artefacts and devoting himself to bizarre mystical beliefs. Robert's wife, Bertha, feels that there are few things more dreadful than a husband who will persist in making a fool of himself in public. Their marriage consists of horrible quarrels, futile arguments, incessant bickering. Scarcely any friends will visit the Kewdinghams in their peaceful hometown Shufflecester. Everything is wrong - and with the entrance of John Harrigall, a bohemian bachelor from London who catches Bertha's eye, they take a turn for the worse. Soon deep passions and resentments shatter the calm facade of the Kewdinghams' lives. This richly characterised and elegantly written crime novel from 1933 is a true forgotten classic.


message 3: by Christine PNW, Agathyte (new)

Christine PNW (moonlight_reader) | 1165 comments Tara wrote: "I'll suggest Family Matters Family Matters by Anthony Rolls by Anthony Rolls:

Robert Arthur Kewdingham is an eccentric failure of a man. In middle age he retre..."


Thanks, Tara! That looks interesting!


message 4: by Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) (last edited Sep 02, 2021 05:23AM) (new)

Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) (themis-athena) | 471 comments Christine PNW wrote: "Tara wrote: "I'll suggest Family Matters Family Matters by Anthony Rolls by Anthony Rolls:

Robert Arthur Kewdingham is an eccentric failure of a man. In middle age he retre..."

Thanks, Tara! That looks interesting!"


It's very funny -- I read it a few years ago. (It was highly praised by Dorothy L. Sayers, incidentally.) Though ever since I read it, I've been wondering about the science behind the reveal! :)


message 5: by BrokenTune (new)

BrokenTune | 349 comments Tara wrote: "I'll suggest Family Matters Family Matters by Anthony Rolls by Anthony Rolls:

Robert Arthur Kewdingham is an eccentric failure of a man. In middle age he retre..."


Ooooh! I'll hold back on a suggestion of my own because Family Matters was one that came to my mind, too!


message 6: by Tara (new)

Tara  | 105 comments BrokenTune wrote: "Tara wrote: "I'll suggest Family Matters Family Matters by Anthony Rolls by Anthony Rolls:

Robert Arthur Kewdingham is an eccentric failure of a man. In middle..."


Great minds Tune ;)


Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) (themis-athena) | 471 comments OK, I'm going to nominate the book I just finished, Mary Kelly's The Spoilt Kill: A Staffordshire Mystery.

It's less mystery than no-holds-barred psychological and social analysis, with an anything BUT cozy outlook, on late 1950s / early 1960s English / British society. Why this book hasn't survived in print until today is the true mystery here; the writing is top-notch, and the atmosphere straddles the borders of noir to a surprising extent.

The plot as such concerns a murder at a Staffordshire pottery manufacturer, modelled on the likes of Spode and Wedgwood; and while that murder actually does turn out to be central to the book and its characters, for the first 1/3d or so you wouldn't think as much, as Kelly takes her time building the characters and atmosphere -- but it all pays off in spades at the end. The book had come with great recommendations, but Kelly still managed to bowl me over completely.


message 8: by BrokenTune (new)

BrokenTune | 349 comments Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) wrote: "OK, I'm going to nominate the book I just finished, Mary Kelly's The Spoilt Kill: A Staffordshire Mystery.

It's less mystery than no-holds-barred psychological and social analysis,..."


I like Mary Kelly a lot, too, so now it is already going to be a tough choice!

Btw, I completely missed that BLCC re-issued the next in that series - Due to a Death - earlier this year, with a lovely new cover.


Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) (themis-athena) | 471 comments BrokenTune wrote: "Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) wrote: "OK, I'm going to nominate the book I just finished, Mary Kelly's The Spoilt Kill: A Staffordshire Mystery.

It's less mystery than no-holds-..."


I recently downloaded it, on the strength of being by Mary Kelly alone -- I didn't even check which series (if any) it was part of! :) Though I suspect that The Spoilt Kill will have been hard even for her to top.


message 10: by BrokenTune (new)

BrokenTune | 349 comments Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) wrote: "BrokenTune wrote: "Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) wrote: "OK, I'm going to nominate the book I just finished, Mary Kelly's The Spoilt Kill: A Staffordshire Mystery.

It's less mys..."


I liked The Spoilt Kill but nowhere near as much as Dead Corse. ;)


Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) (themis-athena) | 471 comments BrokenTune wrote: "I liked The Spoilt Kill but nowhere near as much as Dead Corse. ;)"

The setting (an industrial production site, in this case a steel mill) seems to be similar to that of The Spoilt Kill?


message 12: by BrokenTune (new)

BrokenTune | 349 comments Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) wrote: "BrokenTune wrote: "I liked The Spoilt Kill but nowhere near as much as Dead Corse. ;)"

The setting (an industrial production site, in this case a steel mill) seems to be similar to that of The Spo..."


Yes, similar, but a quite different in other aspects. I need to remind myself about the ending and solution to The Spoilt Kill, tho.


Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) (themis-athena) | 471 comments BrokenTune wrote: "Yes, similar, but a quite different in other aspects. I need to remind myself about the ending and solution to The Spoilt Kill, tho."

I'm sure the rest is different -- it just struck me that Kelly's interest in this sort of setting is, in and of itself, outside the bounds of classic Golden Age mystery writing. (And she was also anticipating the Silver Age, e.g., books by authors such as Julian Symos, in that way.)


message 14: by Christine PNW, Agathyte (new)

Christine PNW (moonlight_reader) | 1165 comments I own both books, so either works for me!

I'm going to nominate The Port of London Murders, which will be released for US readers in a few days. Themis nominated it earlier and it looked great, but withdrew it b/c BLCC hadn't yet released it in the US!


Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) (themis-athena) | 471 comments Christine PNW wrote: "I own both books, so either works for me!

I'm going to nominate The Port of London Murders, which will be released for US readers in a few days. Themis nominated it earlier and it looked great, but withdrew it b/c BLCC hadn't yet released it in the US!"


Oh, excellent! I thought about making that my repeat nomination but wasn't sure about North American publication dates, whereas I was fairly sure about The Spoilt Kill -- but they're both really great books. Wow, the selection really *is* going to be a difficult one this time around, on the basis of a mere three books already!


message 16: by Mike (new)

Mike Finn (goodreadscommike_finn) | 357 comments I have 'The Port Of London Murders' (I couldn't resist the cover) but I'd be happy with either of the other two.

Just to help us have another tight-run poll, I nominate:

'The Feast' by Margaret Kennedy.
The Feast

It's 1947 and seven guests die when a cliff collapse onto a Cornish coastal hotel in midsummer. This one is interesting as much for the class tensions it displays as for the mystery.


Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) (themis-athena) | 471 comments Mike wrote: "Just to help us have another tight-run poll, I nominate:

'The Feast' by Margaret Kennedy."


Oooh, this one looks phantastic as well!!


message 18: by Christine PNW, Agathyte (last edited Sep 07, 2021 11:08AM) (new)

Christine PNW (moonlight_reader) | 1165 comments Just a reminder that we're still collecting nominations for the November side read. If you haven't already put up a book, you still have time.

I'm going to close the nominations on Saturday, September 12th so I can get a poll up before I go on vacation.


message 19: by Marie (new)

Marie | 100 comments I’ll nominate Sergeant Cluff Stands Firm by Gil North.
In the introduction, Martin Edwards writes: “Amy Wright had married late in life, to a much younger man. She was quite comfortably off, yet is found dead at her home, poisoned by gas in her own bedroom.” The verdict is suicide while the balance of her mind was disturbed, but Sgt. Cluff disagrees.
Cluff is stolid and relentless. North’s writing is spare and crisp. I’m enjoying this 1960 novel immensely. Amazon/Kindle £2.99 UK; $3.82 US.


message 20: by Christine PNW, Agathyte (new)

Christine PNW (moonlight_reader) | 1165 comments Marie wrote: "I’ll nominate Sergeant Cluff Stands Firm by Gil North.
In the introduction, Martin Edwards writes: “Amy Wright had married late in life, to a much younger man. She was quite comfortably off, yet is..."


thanks, Marie!


message 21: by Jessica (new)

Jessica | 157 comments I don't think I saw this poll happen yet so I assume we still need books for it? If so, I nominate The Unfinished Clue since I have it sitting on my shelf waiting to be read.


message 22: by Christine PNW, Agathyte (new)

Christine PNW (moonlight_reader) | 1165 comments The poll is (finally) up! VOTE HERE!


message 23: by Christine PNW, Agathyte (new)

Christine PNW (moonlight_reader) | 1165 comments Our November Side Read is:

The Port of London Murders (British Library Crime Classics Book 84) by Josephine Bell
The Port of London Murders


Themis-Athena (Lioness at Large) (themis-athena) | 471 comments Christine PNW wrote: "Our November Side Read is:

The Port of London Murders (British Library Crime Classics Book 84) by Josephine Bell
The Port of London Murders"


Oooh, great!


message 25: by Lisa Bianca (new)

Lisa Bianca (lisabianca) | 9 comments Has there been a poll on these nominations yet? I can't find anything in messages or the discussions. Excuse me if it is staring me in the face and really i have plenty to go on with reading in the meantime :)


message 26: by Christine PNW, Agathyte (new)

Christine PNW (moonlight_reader) | 1165 comments Two posts up it says that The Port of London Murders is our November side-read!


message 27: by Lisa Bianca (new)

Lisa Bianca (lisabianca) | 9 comments Christine PNW wrote: "Two posts up it says that The Port of London Murders is our November side-read!"

Thank you Christine, I can see it as clear as day, now I've asked. Apologies. :)


message 28: by Christine PNW, Agathyte (new)

Christine PNW (moonlight_reader) | 1165 comments Lisa wrote: "Christine PNW wrote: "Two posts up it says that The Port of London Murders is our November side-read!"

Thank you Christine, I can see it as clear as day, now I've asked. Apologies. :)"


Lol - no worries!


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