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The Herring in the Library
 
 

The Herring in the Library [Kindle Edition]

L. C. Tyler
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Review

'The third book in this delightful series...is very much set in 'Golden Age' territory...Written with relish and a light heart, The Herring in the Library plays with the conventions of the traditional crime story. No gore and nothing to frighten the horses - but plenty of nifty plot-twists, jokes all the way, and a great deal of fun.' --The Guardian, Laura Wilson

'A rib-tickling take on Christie's classic country house murders. Funny, but cleverly intriguing with it. The series is fast achieving cult status... Snap up Ten Little Herrings too...'
--Peterborough Evening Telegraph, 6th August

'The latest in a tremendously funny series which has fun with- rather than making fun of - the classic British whodunnit...There are plenty of in-jokes aimed a fans of classic crime, and indeed at contemporary crime writers...' --Morning Star, Mat Coward

'Pastiches and parodies of the golden age of whodunits are hardly scarce, but few succeed in getting it right. Agatha Christie and her ilk seem to be easy targets, but too much mickey-taking ceases to be fun. More importantly, affectionate satire on its own is not enough: plot and characters must work too. LC Tyler's `Herring' series of which The Herring in the Library is the third, meets all the challenges with panache...A joy to read.' --The Times

Product Description

When literary agent Elsie Thirkettle is invited to accompany tall but obscure crime-writer Ethelred Tressider to dinner at Muntham Court, she is looking forward to sneering at his posh friends. What she is not expecting is that, half way through the evening, her host will be found strangled in his locked study. Since there is no way that a murderer could have escaped, the police conclude that Sir Robert Muntham has killed himself. A distraught Lady Muntham, however, asks Ethelred to conduct his own investigation. Ethelred (ably hindered by Elsie) sets out to resolve a classic ‘locked room’ mystery; but is any one of the assorted guests and witnesses actually telling the truth? And can Ethelred’s account be trusted? In the process, we meet one of Ethelred’s own creations, the fourteenth-century detective Master Thomas, who is helped in his investigations of a mediaeval crime at Muntham Court by a small and rather pushy Abbess with a taste for honey cakes . . . Is it possible that Master Thomas can shed some light on the twenty-first century case, and on Ethelred’s own motives for investigating Sir Robert’s death? The Herring in the Library is another ingenious outing for crime fiction’s most mismatched double-act. ‘Tyler juggles characters, story, wit and clever one-liners with perfect balance’ THE TIMES

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 588 KB
  • Publisher: Macmillan (1 July 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B0058GVNVQ
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #88,159 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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L. C. Tyler
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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
5 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Intelligent, light-hearted mysteries, 2 Aug 2010
L.C.Tyler's The Herring-Seller's Apprentice, his debut novel, was a splendidly witty affair. It attracted a good deal of well-deserved attention, introducing as it did two very entertaining characters, unsuccessful crime writer Ethelred Tressider and his long-suffering agent Elsie Thirkettle, in a story which paid agreeable homage to the Golden Age mystery. There was a freshness about the story and its telling that lifted it well above run of the mill pastiche. So I approached Tyler's fourth and latest novel, and his third featuring Ethelred and Elsie, with much enthusiasm. Happily, it lived up to expectations. As the title suggests, we are in Golden Age territory. In classic fashion, Ethelred's old friend Sir Robert Muntham is found dead in the library of Muntham Court, after a dinner attended by Ethelred, Elsie, and a host of people who had reason to wish Sir Robert harm. The present day narrative is accompanied by extracts from one of Ethelred's historical mysteries, featuring Chaucer's sidekick Master Thomas, investigating a crime which has curious parallels with the case of Sir Robert. Tyler manages, therefore, to poke fun at two different kinds of detective story in the course of one novel. There are plenty of jokes, as well as a witty finale, and if you like intelligent, light-hearted mysteries, with not a sadistic serial killer in sight, this will be right up your street.

Reviewed by Martin Edwards - author of the highly acclaimed Harry Devlin Mysteries)
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not as good as the first two Herrings, 5 Jan 2012
In this novel Ethelred and Elsie are invited to an evening a country house where the host drops dead. In the same vein as the first two books, we get the story from two various viewpoints. Unfortunately this is a bit wearing as Elsie is annoying and incompetent . At first this was funny annoying, now it's just annoying. The dim Ethelred and the funny chubby sidekick have lost their freshness by book three. By no means the worst book I've ever read but by the middle I just wanted to rush through to the end so that it could be over with (even in mediocre whodunnits I want to know who done it).
Not one I would recommend.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars King of the Comic Crime Caper, 12 Aug 2010
In crowded field of post-modern, metaphysically tricksy, cosy crime, odd-couple, Wodehouse-meets-Calvino mystery, LC Tyler has no peers.

The third 'Ethelred and Elsie' novel has all the ingredients that Tyler fans will expect: a classic Agatha Christie-style plot (a locked room mystery in this case); wry observations on the literary world and the crime genre; an ending which subverts everything which has gone before; and a bone-dry narrative voice to hold the thing together.

Most comic crime novels manage the crime better than the comedy. LC Tyler is one of the very few genuinely amusing crime writers. Luckily he's a much better writer than his protagonist Ethelred Tressider (whose own agent admits he's third-rate). No such accusation could be levelled against LC Tyler, and my only complaint is that we have to wait another year before the next adventure with our dynamic duo.

Tim Stretton, author of The Dog of the North
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