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Edward Marston

THE MAMMOTH BOOK OF BEST BRITISH CRIME - ed by Maxim Jakubowski

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Author's Home Country: 
United Kingdom
Categorisation
Category: 
Crime Fiction
Sub Genre: 
Short Stories
Book Information
Book Title: 
The Mammoth Book of Best British Crime
ISBN: 
9781849015677
Location: 
United Kingdom
Publisher: 
Robinsons
Year of Publication: 
2011

Leading editor and reviewer Maxim Jakubowski has compiled another beguiling collection of the year's best new short crime fiction from the UK.  Ian Rankin's perennially popular Edinburgh cop, Inspector Rebus, makes an unexpected comeback in a short but intriguing story 'The Very Last Drop', and the collection closes with another Rankin story 'Driven'.

Book Review: 

Mammoth by name, mammoth by nature - this collection has 42 stories in total, many of which come from well-known names, with a good sprinkling of new and emerging writers. Exactly the sort of thing short story fans would be looking for.

Preferring the darker side of the genre, there was lots to satisfy this reader in this collection, but there's also entries from the lighter side - how could there not be with writers like Alexander McCall Smith.  In this collection you'll find a couple of entries by Ian Rankin and Peter Lovesey and others from Mick Herron, Denise Mina, Edward Marston, Marilyn Todd, Kate Atkinson, Stuart MacBride, David Hewson, Alexander McCall Smith, Nigel Bird, Robert Barnard, Lin Anderson, Allan Guthrie, A.L. Kennedy, Simon Kernick, Roz Southey, Andrew Taylor, Sheila Quigley, Declan Burke, Keith McCarthy, Christopher Brookmyre, Gerard Brennan, Matthew J. Elliott, Colin Bateman, Ray Banks, Simon Brett, Adrian Magson, Jay Stringer, Amy Myers, Nick Quantrill, Stephen Booth, Paul Johnston, Zoe Sharp, Paul D. Brazill, Louise Welsh, Liza Cody, Peter Turnbull and Nicholas Royle.  You can probably imagine with a lineup like that, just how good each of these stories is to have been included.  The range is wide, the subject and handling different, and frankly, this is just a terrific collection.

Just a quick warning - a few stories in this collection are duplicated in the little collection CRIMESPOTTING I read a while ago.  No big deal - they were all well worth reading a second time.

MURDER ON THE BRIGHTON EXPRESS - Edward Marston

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Author's Home Country: 
United Kingdom
Categorisation
Category: 
Crime Fiction
Sub Genre: 
Historical
Book Information
Book Title: 
Murder on the Brighton Express
ISBN: 
9780749079451
Location: 
England
Publisher: 
Allison & Busby
Year of Publication: 
2008

It is Autumn 1856 and trains are making the population more mobile. Brighton has become one of the main destinations for recreation.  The increase in rail traffic has coincided with a rise in derailments and the death. When the Brighton Express is derailed, killing the driver and eleven passengers and injuring many more, the railway company conducts a cursory investigation.

 

Book Review: 

MURDER ON THE BRIGHTON EXPRESS is the fifth in the Railway Detective series and it’s easy to see why the series is popular.  Colbeck is a progressive and broadminded man; a rarity in Victorian times.  It is easy to visualise the Victorian world that the author Edward Marston has chosen for his characters. Marston paints little vignettes of life in England in the mid-nineteenth century through his characters. 

 

MURDER ON THE BRIGHTON EXPRESS is not going to set the world on fire, but it does offer an engrossing mystery with diverse characters to make for a light, entertaining read.

 

SOLDIER OF FORTUNE, Edward Marston

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Author's Home Country: 
United Kingdom
Categorisation
Category: 
Crime Fiction
Sub Genre: 
Historical
Book Information
Book Title: 
Soldier of Fortune
ISBN: 
9780749080525
Series: 
Daniel Rawon
Publisher: 
Allison & Busby
Year of Publication: 
2008

 

The dashing Captain Daniel Rawson - spy, linguist, duellist, ladies' man and career soldier - can charm a woman as well as he can parry a sword.  And whether it is extracting information from the wife of a French general or leading his soldiers in a Forlorn Hope, Rawson proves himself invaluable to John Churchill, the Duke of Marlborough, and the Confederate forces as they had towards the ferocious battle of Blenheim.
 
Book Review: 

 

SOLDIER OF FORTUNE is the first book featuring Captain Daniel Rawson, although the author has written at least 40 other crime novels, in a range of different groups set in four distinct periods of history.
 
This book opens with Daniel - the child - greeting his father on temporary leave from battle.  Nathan is fighting to depose the King and put the Duke of Monmouth on the throne.  The forces of the Duke lose and Nathan is put to death.  Daniel and his Dutch mother flee England - to the safety of his mother's native land.  Years later, as a young and dashing soldier, Daniel returns to fighting - this time for the Duke of Marlborough and the Confederate forces in the battle of Blenheim.  
 
Daniel is a career soldier and spy - dashing, loyal and unfailingly courageous, he is also extremely attractive to women.  He uses that attraction to discover information from the wife of a famous General in his role as Confederate spy.  Returning to the battlefield, he is pursued - by Miss Abigail Piper, a beautiful and very wilful young lady he met briefly before leaving for the fight; and somewhat more disconcertingly, by two hired assassins.  The General has no intention of allowing himself to be cuckolded without taking his own revenge.  Daniel must keep Miss Abigail safe, stay alive himself, fight the battle for the Duke, rid the world of the assassins and dodge the bullet of commitment to just one woman.
 
Needless to say as you've probably guessed from the description Daniel is a bit of a swashbuckling, all round hero type - leaping from tall buildings, riding horses and fighting pitched sword battles to defend himself, King, Country, the lady, the principle and whatever else needs to be swashed into submission.  
 
To be brutally honest there is absolutely nothing in this plot that can't be seen coming from a very long way away, and these sort of books are not my normal reading fare - but it really did roll along at a good pace, and the swashing was buckled with a certain style.  Daniel wasn't so over the top a hero that you didn't want to track him down and thump him with his own sword, Miss Abigail was brave and downright annoying all at the same time, and the lurking assassins nicely threatening - in a predictable sort of a way.  
 
You really could see SOLDIER OF FORTUNE appealing to readers who like a bit of romance, high intrigue and maybe a touch of the Errol Flynn's about their escapist reading.
 

Currently Reading - Soldier of Fortune, Edward Marston

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In a significant change of pace for me, I'm currently reading Soldier of Fortune by Edward Marston. 

 

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