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Arms and the Women
 
 
Arms and the Women (Paperback)
by Reginald Hill (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars 26 customer reviews (26 customer reviews)
RRP: £7.99
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Product details

Product Description
Amazon.co.uk Review
Readers await each new Dalziel and Pascoe novel from Reginald Hill with great anticipation and fans will be pleased to find that Arms and the Women is absolutely vintage stuff: pungently witty dialogue coupled with Hill's highly intelligent plotting. And after the massive success of On Beulah Height, Hill took a risk by introducing an innovation--the new novel is written in the book-within-a-book format. Dalziel and Pascoe, however, are true to form. The former as blunt and bawdy as ever, while the university-educated Pascoe with his troubling conscience makes the perfect contrast.

Ellie, a former campaigner for the hard left, is writing a book--the very book that readers have access to. So when Ellie's life is threatened, her friends assume it has to do with her marriage to a cop. But Ellie isn't so sure and enlists the help of the doughty duo, soon finding the death threats lead to packs of Irish Republicans, Colombian drug-dealers and bogus council officers. Interestingly enough, Ellie's problems are shared with a motley assortment of other women: her middle-class friend Daphne, a vivacious South American money-launderer and a pushy female copper. Is the target her husband Peter? Needless to say, the narrative has enough twists and turns to baffle the most astute reader, and each fresh revelation is both dramatic and unexpected.

Even without the pyrotechnics of plot, Dalziel remains a highly entertaining, and Hill enthusiasts will feel that they are getting their money's worth. --Barry Forshaw --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Synopsis
'Luminously written, thrilling, unexpectedly erudite, and beautifully structured' Geoffrey Wansell, Daily Mail When Ellie Pascoe finds herself under threat, the men in her life assume it's because she's married to a cop. But while they trawl after shoals of red herrings, Ellie is blasted off course with a motley crew of women on a voyage of discovery whose perils make Scylla and Charybdis look like a pair of Barbie dolls. Irish arms, Colombian drugs, and men who will stop at nothing, create a tidal wave which threatens to sweep her away. She heads out of town in search of haven, but instead finds herself at the very edge of the storm in a remote clifftop house undermined by the sea. Fat Andy eventually smells a Security Service rat and comes steaming to the rescue, but for once it's too little, too late. Ellie's on her own (apart from her Middle England friend, Daphne; an octogenarian aid-worker and her vapid secretary; a gorgeous South American money launderer; an ancient crone; and a female cop who gets up her nose) and must reach deep down into her reserves to find the strength to survive.


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Customer Reviews
26 Reviews
5 star: 46%  (12)
4 star: 23%  (6)
3 star: 11%  (3)
2 star: 7%  (2)
1 star: 11%  (3)
 
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Far-fetched but oddly absorbing, 10 Jul 2006
By Isafish "Isafish" (London, England) - See all my reviews
I very much enjoyed the book despite agreeing with some of the specific accusations that other reviewers level at it.

Specifically, there are three faults:

(a) the plot is far-fetched,
(b) there's too much Ellie Pascoe, surely the most irritating coffee-table socialist ever created,
(c) there's the usual tendency towards overwrought writing, arcane vocabulary and general pretentiousness. This has always been the case with Reginald Hill's books, but has become exaggerated with time. Arms and Women is a later period novel.

So why have i given it 4 stars? Well, it's just a really good read! Once you sign up to the story's fantastical premise, you never really look back. I hardly put the book down once i'd begun.

And really, if overwritten prose is a turn-off for you, then you shouldn't be reading Reginald Hill in the first place should you? Try Tess Gerritsen instead. No, this is for those who enjoy rich fare, at least now and again.

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best crime novels ever., 19 Oct 2001
By simonkurt@yahoo.com (Manchester, England) - See all my reviews
On Beulah Height is the Dalziel and Pascoe novel where it all finally comes together. The characterisation is true and insightful, the story complex without being too clever for it's own good (an occasional fault of Hill's) and the atmosphere both subtle and powerful. The sense of melancholy is beutifully maintained, keeping just the right side of parody as the story about missing children unfolds and plot line after plot line become entangled. The juggling of the personal stories of the main characters and the ever moving plotline is well done, with the interwining of the two never seeming contrived or forced. Most importantly of all, the fact that Dalziel and Pascoe are investigating the disappearance of children in the present and in history is never forgotten, and the progress of this investigation is kept in view and of primary importance.

Quite simply the best Dalziel and Pascoe book in the sequence. Moving, exciting and intelligent.

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