Rating:  Summary: For fans only Review: If you're an Elizabeth George fan - and I am - this book is still a satisfying installment. But it's really just for fans, since it's relatively weak in plot.
Rating:  Summary: whine whine whine whine... Review: Gosh - I really did not enjoy this book. I love Elizabeth George's books but Deborah St. James is the biggest baby and what a schmuck her husband, Simon, is. He needs to tell Deb to grow up. Okay - so she can not have a baby. Hello, adopt!!! It is not like money is an issue for them. This books was long and made longer by having the reader suffer with the unsufferable (is that a word??) Deb. Lynley and Havers and their relationship with London is what makes George's books so entertaining and interesting. When she writes a story with boring and silly characters throughout the whole story (like Adrian's Mom)it is just too tedious for words...I wonder what Ms. George has to say to all the critism regarding her leaving out Barbara.
Rating:  Summary: Okay, but not the best.... Review: Along with many other readers, I missed Barbara Havers in Elizabeth George's latest 'detective' novel. Sorry, but Debs just isn't the same. Barbara has some depth. However, to set A PLACE OF HIDING in Guernsey, George had to use someone who could actually travel there and conduct an investigation. Since Lynley and Havers are British cops they have no jurisdiction in Guernsey. That St James and his spouse are able to do anything given the downright hostility of the local gendarme, stretches credulity almost to the breaking point. George writes what some critics characterize as a "cozy" mystery-a setting associated with a big old house, several possible suspects (not the whole world), and a victim with many character defects and/or lots of money potential heirs covet. The mystery is solved within a few days by a "hero" (sometimes a cop, sometimes not), who has little dependance on forensic evidence. Generally, the plot is the strong part of these types of novel and there is little character development. Although George is very good and I'll read her in a pinch, I much prefer books by P.D. James-and when he was writing the Morse series, Colin Dexter. Perhaps the quality of the mystery is associated with the author's age. Miss Marple, Poirot, and Morse, although very different had lived a bit and understood human nature--as had their creators. Dalgliesh, the son of a vicar, is troubled by existential issues and has a creator in her 80s. Both Lynley and St James are young, relatively well off, and apparently both pretty good looking. Most of their problems seem to involve interpersonal relations with the opposite sex (girlfriends, spouses, or wives, and in Lynley's case-Sgt. Havers). Perhaps as she grows older George will bring a deeper sense of existential angst to her main characters, but at this point, she does not appear to be able to do so. She had several opportunities in A PLACE OF HIDING, but did not follow through. At times, I get the feeling that George would like to write like George Simeon (the master of the psychological novel) or Agatha Christie (the queen of mystery plots), but does not have the skill. As far as I am concerned she gets a B- on both plot and character development in this book. I still buy her books, however, which tells you something about what is available on the market. George uses "notions" that remind me of material found in novels by other authors, most obviously LIVING WITH THE ENEMY by Roy McLoughlin--which she acknowledges. McLoughlin's novel is set in Guernsey during WWII. What will mystery writers do for plot material when they can't harken back to WWII. Go back to WWI, I suppose. Take MAISIE DOBBS.....now there's a protagonist who shows a great deal of promise...
Rating:  Summary: Until reading her last three books, I was a fan of George. Review: This last book needs severe editing. The style is increasingly sef-indulgent, repetitive and muddy. I struggled with the confused syntax and clumsy metaphors. Various sections using changes in characters' voices and streams of consciousness makes A Place of Hiding almost unreadable. I tried following the story for a while because the setting (the island of Guernsey, occupied by the Nazis from 1940-43) interested me, but found myself skipping through the second half to find the conclusion. A deeper and more fulfilling treatment of the setting can be found in Tim Binding's novel, Lying with the Enemy, which I heartily recommend. This will be the last E. George book that I will open.
Rating:  Summary: Sisters and Brothers Review: Mystery stories derive fuel from resentment and other forms of insecurity. The setting is Guernsey. Guy Bouchard chokes to death on the sort of stone islanders use to ward off evil. A friend of Deborah St. James is charged with the murder. An assorted group of people is involved evidencing difficult relationships with the deceased. Still, he was a rich man and played the role of a sort of Santa Claus in Guernsey. He was not the sort to have enemies. His sister, who had been something of a lifelong companion, is dying of cancer and has considerable pain. In fact, the dead man was swimming the morning of his death in order to help alleviate his anxiety over her condition. It would be hard to find the person who wished him ill. It would be hard to find a motive. The island had been occupied by the Germans in World War II. A great deal of Nazi memorabilia has been discovered and there is a plan to create a museum for it. The decedent, though, made no provision for this in his will. His will is very surprising to everyone, his sister included. Something strange had been going on and his sister isn't sure what it is. She explains the Norman customary law to Simon St. James to explain the Guernsey laws of inheritance. The deceased had circumvented these. Things are not what they seem. A son has to face the fact that his heroic-seeming father was a collaborator. The supposed plans for a museum are unsigned and are stock plans for a spa. The estate is missing a lot of the expected funds. It turns out a sibling is untrustworthy and this suffices to set up everything else in this picture of misunderstandings. The plotting is wonderful. Elizabeth George is the best mystery writer. It is to be regretted that Inspector Lynley and some of the other regular characters play hardly any role in this adventure.
Rating:  Summary: Maybe The Next One Will Be Bettre Review: I always snag Ms George's books hot off the press. I was happy to read it quickly and sell it back to a used bookstore before the jig was up. This was a collection of truly unappealing characters, engaged in unbelievable and peculiar activities. I read to the end to see 'whodunnit' but didn't enjoy the trip. Ms. George is an outstanding writer and somehow I think I'd enjoy her version of a grocery list. But the characters were just not people I'd want to spend time with.I'd rather have Lynley and Havers back again. Simon is third on the list and Deborah needs to grow up beforeshe's trotted out for the public again. As to the focus on a druggie ne'r do well young man and his misguided sister, it was a poor choice. Cherokee was a bum and his sister China either incredibly naive or just plain stupid. I kept hoping they'd disappear along with the trophy wife, the chain smoking kid and his disgusting mother.
Rating:  Summary: Oh dear, where have all the flowers gone? Review: If this were the first book of Elizabeth George's I had read then I most certainly would be crossing her off my list. This is a shame because those of us who might be classed as fans know she is far better than this latest novel demonstrates. I did an awful lot of scanning during my read which can result in much confusion if the plot is well detailed and constructed. However,I did not have to refer back to the texr once, indicating, at least to me, that my scanning had cost me little and there is far too much padding. Essentially though the whole story was a gigantic contrivance and this probably contributed greatly to its incredulity. On a very personally biased note I was really disappointed that Barbara Havers was missing from George's latest story. Of all the regular characters Havers stands out like a beacon. Shining far brighter than the soppy, egocentric and at times plain incompetent Thomas Lynley. Certainly much brighter than the bland Simon St James and his silly and spoilt little wife who both seem to have walked out of some Mills and Boon novelette. So please lets have Barbara back and playing the lead. Finally, a piece of real nit picking. I was always remember that the guidance provide by Fowler's "... Modern English Usage includes the following comment under the entry 'French Words' "Display of superior knowledge is as great a vulgarity as dislay of superior wealth - greater, indeed, inasmuch as knowledge should tend more definitely than wealth towards discretion and good manners. That is the guiding principle ... in the using ... of French words in English writing... . To use French words that your reader does not know...is inconsiderate and rude." Lets hope Elizabeth George remembers her manners in her future writings.
Rating:  Summary: Where's Havers? Review: I was terribly disappointed in this book and that's bad because I didn't like the last one as much as I'd hoped either. I'm beginning to question my devotion to the inhabitants of George's imaginary London world. Perhaps I'm in a literary rut but I like to read about the clever and dashing Tommy Lynley and the realistically complex Barbara Havers. I like the other constables (Webberly, et al) and I enjoy St. James' contributions to the plot twists, too, but I should have known that a book with the whiny and self-absorbed Deborah as protagonist would not satisfy me. I find that George's upper class female characters are not as inherently interesting as the grittier, working-class Havers. Their lives, so privileged and easy, so lacking in actual achievement, seem petty when compared to Havers' struggle to define herself as a woman professional in a man's field, while still clutching tightly to the traditional woman's role, namely caring for her elderly and infirm parents. I admire and enjoy the raw honesty of Havers' internal struggles as she makes her choice every day about how much time and energy she can afford to devote to two competing, nearly opposite, responsibilities. Additionally, I love her fierce devotion to her values and principals, her strength of character in the face of adversity, and her tightly constricted, yet aching to burst, heart. She's probably among my favorite contemporary female characters and deserves another story of her own. Next to her, many other women pale to beige. Deborah is one of these. As a peripheral character, Deborah is fine, adding a pretty atmosphere and sexual tension to the loving, yet tortured, relationship between Simon and Tommy, but I cannot identify with her self-obsessed whinging. It's hard to feel sorry for a woman who feels brutalized by life merely because she doesn't get whatever she wants whenever she wants it. Lots of women long for families and struggle to make their professional mark, yet few can afford to indulge in such navel-gazing in Cheyne Walk. Most, like Havers and Deborah's art school friend China Rivers, must get up and hustle to work every day. Deborah freely admits that observers might find it hard to feel sorry for her, as she bears no financial responsibility for her own or anyone else's support, and can shoot only what she likes (ten thousand developed images as she searches for her own perspective) as she has no clients to please, as China has. Despite these observations of her obvious privileges, she wallows, envying China's professional interests and status, but unwilling to pay the emotional and financial price for artistic freedom, as China has. Deborah hasn't the strength of personality to front a novel, even one with as ephemeral a plot as this one, in which Deborah, nearly single-handedly, discovers who murdered a manipulative rich man and framed China for it. Maybe I've read too many of these, but it wasn't as hard as I'd hoped to figure out who done it. The novel lacked the sparkle and punch of George's earlier work. The main internal conflict comes from Deborah's unhappiness with the way the courtly Simon treats her, not from the pangs of her own confused, yet determined, desire to grow into a self-actualized woman. The external class-conflict that George brings to life so vividly between Tommy and Havers is dimly recalled by the obvious class differences between Deborah and China. Unfortunately, these conflicts aren't examined closely enough for anyone (including the reader) to learn anything. No one takes a stand, no one overcomes prejudices, no one develops as a character: everyone stands around and means well but nothing really happens, except. . . Deborah goes home to reinvent herself again.
Rating:  Summary: Poor showing Review: Elizabeth George is generally a top-notch writer, but A Place of Hiding is an unfortunate exception. The plot was extremely disjointed, and so contrived that at the story's conclusion, very little of the set-up actually made logical sense. George's heretofore tight prose has given way to high school level analogy. Readers looking for the further adventures of Thomas Lynley and Barbara Havers will be disappointed to note that Lynley appears only peripherally, and Havers not at all. Simon & Deborah spearhead this investigation (most improbably), dragging with them the detritus of their marriage, a relationship which is now beyond boring. Truly a disappointment.
Rating:  Summary: It's not her best, but it's still really good. Review: Good writing, interesting plot, and I don't need to love every character. Definitely worth it!
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