Afbeelding van de auteur.

Andrew Taylor (1) (1951–)

Auteur van The American Boy

Voor andere auteurs genaamd Andrew Taylor, zie de verduidelijkingspagina.

Andrew Taylor (1) via een alias veranderd in Andrew Saville.

53+ Werken 5,452 Leden 336 Besprekingen Favoriet van 10 leden

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Werken van Andrew Taylor

Titels zijn toegeschreven aan Andrew Saville.

The American Boy (2003) 966 exemplaren
The Ashes of London (2017) 563 exemplaren
The Anatomy of Ghosts (2010) 532 exemplaren
Bleeding Heart Square (2008) 469 exemplaren
Het kwaad ontkiemd (1997) 226 exemplaren
The Fire Court (2018) 200 exemplaren
The Scent of Death (2013) 185 exemplaren
De oorsprong van het kwaad (2000) 166 exemplaren
The Judgement of Strangers (1998) 158 exemplaren
An Air That Kills (1994) 143 exemplaren
The King's Evil (2019) 128 exemplaren
A Stain on the Silence (2006) 125 exemplaren
The Silent Boy (2014) 119 exemplaren
The Last Protector (2020) 107 exemplaren
Call the Dying (2004) 104 exemplaren
Caroline Minuscule (1982) 102 exemplaren
Requiem for an Angel (2002) 89 exemplaren
The Lover of the Grave (1997) 88 exemplaren
Where Roses Fade (2003) 86 exemplaren
The Mortal Sickness (1996) 84 exemplaren
The Royal Secret (2021) 81 exemplaren
Naked to the Hangman (2006) 78 exemplaren
The Suffocating Night (1998) 72 exemplaren
Death's Own Door (2001) 70 exemplaren
An Old School Tie (1986) 53 exemplaren
Waiting for the End of the World (1984) 51 exemplaren
Fireside Gothic (2016) 49 exemplaren
The Barred Window (1993) 46 exemplaren
The Shadows of London (2023) 45 exemplaren
The Second Midnight (1987) 42 exemplaren
The Raven on the Water (1991) 38 exemplaren
Our Fathers' Lies (1985) 34 exemplaren
Freelance Death (1987) 28 exemplaren
The Sleeping Policeman (1992) 25 exemplaren
The Long Sonata of the Dead (2013) 16 exemplaren
Blood Relation (1990) 13 exemplaren
Broken Voices (2014) 13 exemplaren
The Invader (1994) 10 exemplaren
Odd Man Out (1993) 8 exemplaren
Blacklist (1989) 7 exemplaren
Toyshop (1990) 7 exemplaren
Negative Image (1992) 5 exemplaren
The Leper House (2014) 5 exemplaren
The Scratch (2014) 3 exemplaren
The Writing House 2 exemplaren
The Private Nose (1995) 2 exemplaren
Little Russia 1 exemplaar
Son carnet rouge 1 exemplaar

Gerelateerde werken

Titels zijn toegeschreven aan Andrew Saville.

De man op het balkon (1968) — Introductie, sommige edities1,317 exemplaren
The Mammoth Book of Best British Crime 9 (2012) — Medewerker — 30 exemplaren
The Mammoth Book of Best British Crime 8 (2011) — Medewerker — 28 exemplaren
Perfectly Criminal (1996) — Medewerker — 23 exemplaren
The Verdict of Us All (2006) — Medewerker — 22 exemplaren
Motives for Murder (2016) 20 exemplaren
Deadly Pleasures (2013) — Medewerker — 19 exemplaren
Original Sins (2010) — Medewerker — 11 exemplaren
The Arvon Book of Crime and Thriller Writing (2012) — Medewerker — 10 exemplaren
Crime in the City (2004) — Medewerker — 9 exemplaren
Past Crimes: Perfectly Criminal 3 (1998) — Medewerker — 4 exemplaren
Moord uit het boekje (2013) — Medewerker — 4 exemplaren

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Andrew Taylor in British & Irish Crime Fiction (juli 2008)

Besprekingen

This book reads as a 19th century novel of the kind that Wilkie Collins could have written: its language and tone are largely authentic, and like many books of the period, there is a large cast of characters from all walks of life. Thomas Shield, a schoolmaster with a troubled past is the narrator, and he introduces us to the wealthy Frants and Carswells, whose lives he becomes intimately involved with. There's the young Edgar Allan Poe too, though I'm not sure how important his part really is, despite his presence in the book's title. Murder and skullduggery take place both in London's Dickensian streets, and in rural Gloucestershire . The fast-paced action and the short chapters make the book an atmospheric page-turner, and while it's not a great book, it's a very good read.… (meer)
 
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Margaret09 | 30 andere besprekingen | Apr 15, 2024 |
The Second Midnight did not hold my attention whatsoever, very slow-moving in some parts of the story. I won this in a Goodreads giveaway, so I have never read anything by this author. I was not impressed with his writing style at all.
 
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JKJ94 | 4 andere besprekingen | Jul 27, 2023 |
When a disfigured corpse is found on a building site Cat Hakesby has to halt her work and calls in her friend Marwood to see if he can get works resumed. Marwood is drawn into the hunt for the killer as there are links to his nemesis the Duke of Buckingham and his henchman. Meanwhile the King is plotting the seduction of Louise, an impoverished French noblewoman, who is being groomed as a spy for France. Can the two be linked?
As ever, Taylor has produced a wonderful plot from scant historical records. His characters go from strength to strength, Cat trying to be independent in a time when this was no always possible, Marwood morally trying to steer a course in a corrupt Court. Here the tale is based on the story of Louise de Keroualle, mistress of the ageing Charles II, however it is far more sympathetic to her than most histories. As ever, genuine historical figures make cameo appearances, here it is John Evelyn, but it seems so plausible because of the quality of the writing. A triumph of historical fiction.… (meer)
 
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pluckedhighbrow | Mar 11, 2023 |
The three stories in this collection were originally published as separate “Kindle Singles” but they complement each other very well. Despite their different settings, they share some overlapping themes. More importantly, they all express the atmosphere of old-fashioned eeriness evoked by the well-chosen title Fireside Gothic. This is not blood-and-gore horror, but the type of other-worldly terror which creeps under the reader’s skin. I’ve read a blurb comparing these stories to Andrew Michael Hurley’s brand of folk horror, The Loney in particular. Even this is widely off the mark. If anything, these works are more similar to the ghostly tales of the late 19th and early 20th Centuries or the sort of pastiche (used in its most positive sense) which you would expect from contemporary authors such as Susan Hill.

A perfect example is the opener – Broken Voices. Set in the years prior to the First World War, its protagonists are two teenage students at a Cathedral school who unexpectedly get to spend the Christmas holidays at their school, lodging with a retired teacher. Inspired by ghostly tales about a long-dead composer haunting the cathedral, the boys set off on a nocturnal hunt for the lost score of an anthem, supposedly the composer’s masterpiece. Unsurprisingly, this turns out to be a bad idea.

The story’s ecclesiastical and scholarly setting is one which M.R. James or E.F. Benson would have found familiar, and reading it gave me the same sort of shivers up the spine which I get from these authors. It helped that I was reading Broken Voices on the first (cold)ish Saturday in my part of the world, and that on the same day I was due to take part in an early Christmas concert. I always savour these types of serendipities which complement the content of a story I’m reading and help me delve into its atmosphere. (I remember the same type of feeling when I was reading Charles Palliser’s The Unburied in December a couple of years back). Indeed, Broken Voices is my favourite in this collection, despite its anticlimactic ending.

The premise of The Leper House is markedly different but, despite its modern trappings (a broken-down car in a remote coastal area with no satnav or phone coverage), it also harks back to a classic trope in ghost stories: on a stormy night, the male narrator visits an old house and meets its intriguing (female) inhabitant but then cannot find the building when he returns to look for it in the sobering light of day. (A similar narrative device is used in Oliver Onions’s The Cigarette Case, a ghost story whose details are strangely identical to a “real-life” incident recounted about an old house in Valletta, Malta. I wonder whether this is a case of art imitating life, or the other way round. But I digress…) I will not give away any further plot details, except to state that Taylor takes this premise to unexpected, genre-bending conclusions.

M.R. James used to say that sex is distracting in a supernatural tale. However, at the heart of The Scratch, is a torrid infatuation between Clare, a middle-aged mother who is more-or-less-happily married to Gerald, and Gerald’s orphaned nephew Jack, who has just returned from Afghanistan suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. The story is narrated by Clare, and her guilty musings about this sudden passion for her disturbed lodger are as involving as the work’s supernatural elements. Elements which, one must say, are vague and, possibly, just the result of the protagonists’ feverish imagination – a scratch on Jack’s arm that refuses to heal, Jack’s unnatural revulsion towards his relatives’ pet cat, and his obsession with a phantom big cat which seems to be roaming the nearby forest (although it’s never actually seen except by Jack himself). This is possibly the most original and off-beat of the three stories but, for me, its effect was dampened by the vagueness of its ending – literally a page-load of questions raised – and left unanswered – by the narrator.

Despite these reservations, the collection was right up my street, and I heartily recommend it to fans of classic ghost stories.

https://endsoftheword.blogspot.com/2019/11/fireside-gothic-Andrew-Taylor.html
… (meer)
 
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JosephCamilleri | 3 andere besprekingen | Feb 21, 2023 |

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Statistieken

Werken
53
Ook door
13
Leden
5,452
Populariteit
#4,565
Waardering
½ 3.6
Besprekingen
336
ISBNs
668
Talen
12
Favoriet
10

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