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The Jewel That Was Ours (1991)

door Colin Dexter

Andere auteurs: Zie de sectie andere auteurs.

Reeksen: Inspector Morse (9)

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1,0492419,482 (3.62)23
An Inspector Morse Mystery. The case seems so simple that Inspector Morse deems it beneath his notice. A wealthy, elderly American tourist has a heart attack in her room at Oxford's luxurious Randolph Hotel. Missing from the scene is the lady's handbag, which contained the Wolvercote Tongue, a priceless jewel that her late husband had bequeathed to the Ashmolean Museum just across the street. Morse proceeds to spend a great deal of time thinking-and drinking-in the hotel's bar, certain the solution is close at hand, until conflicting stories, suspicious doings, and a real murder convince him otherwise.… (meer)
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1-5 van 24 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
Pretty happy with this one. A tour bus full of Americans (with interesting back stories) pulls into Oxford to hear tourist talks, but a wife gets dead right away and a jewel (that was to be donated to the Ashmolean Museum) is stolen! Later, a philandering museum director is also killed- must be related, right? Morse and Lewis are on it. Morse also gets cozy with an overly friendly, overly lush Oxford sophisticated lady... .and she is a pretty pleasant time for all. My first Morse and i was struck repeatedly by close resemblances to my favorite Joyce Porter, Inspector Dover. Yes, Dover is certainly played for more laughs (constant) and he has a hostile relationship with his sergeant ... but Morse is also likely to jump to unsupportable conclusions and is often toying with his sergeant and constantly accepting free drinks / food from him too. In short- lots!!!! but .. happily they are both good, so there is space for Morse as well as Dover. ( )
  apende | Jul 12, 2022 |
Boy. Not impressed. At all. ( )
  tmph | Sep 13, 2020 |
Really enjoyed this. It has been a while since I have read an Inspector Morse mystery. I'll have to add some more to my list. Good mystery, good characters, great characters, good twists and stumbles. This one had a very good narrator. ( )
  njcur | Jun 30, 2020 |
In a slight reversal of the customary sequence, this novel was actually an adaptation of a television screenplay. The book is derived from an episode broadcast on Christmas Day during the height of the popularity of the Inspector Morse television series, and Colin Dexter subsequently developed it into a novel, changing many of the plot twists, and delivering a completely different solution to the mystery.

I first encountered Colin Dexter’s books following a recommendation from Mr Wilf Massiah, my wonderful English teacher, who was also my school’s librarian. To be fair, this referral had less to do with any literary merit that Mr Massiah might have perceived in the books, and was more a consequence of the fact that Colin Dexter’s first job after graduating from university had been as a classics teacher at the school (Loughborough Grammar School). Dexter’s spell there was very brief (possibly even just one academic year), and he had moved on long before I was even born, let alone attended the school. He did seem to retain fond memories of his time at the school, however, and became a regular speaker at alumni events throughout the period when the television series dominated ITV’s schedules.

I have often wondered why television producers selected Dexter’s books for adaptation. Presumably he was just lucky in his selection of such a photogenic setting. The Oxford cityscape certainly transferred favourably to the small screen, and John Thaw captured much of the querulous and capricious nature of Morse’s personality. If I might briefly slip[ into nerd mode (although you are probably asking, ‘What do you mean “slip into …”?’), I recall that in the original editions of the earlier novels, Morse actually drove a Lagonda, rather than his celebrated red Jaguar, which was an adornment of television’s making.

To my mind, the early novels in the series tended to be over-complicated to a ridiculous degree, primarily as an exercise in demonstrating Dexter’s own dexterity with crosswords and similar puzzles, which quickly emerged as one of Morse’s identifying features. That trait persists into this book, although to a less obtrusive extent than in some of its predecessors.

The basic scenario revolves around the death in Oxford’s smart Randolph hotel of an American tourist before she was due to present a medieval jewel to the Ashmolean Museum. Despite the almost priceless nature of this jewel, it had been stowed in her handbag which appears to have been stolen at the time of her death. Shortly afterwards, the rather extravagant Oxford academic who was due to receive the jewel on behalf of the Ashmolean, and who saw it as his guarantee of academic preferment, is found dead in the River Isis.

There isn’t really much more to say about the book. It is fairly standard Morse fare. The Chief Inspector is as querulous, and Sergeant Lewis as long-suffering as ever. If you like whodunits, you will probably enjoy this one, as I certainly did, although it is nothing out of the ordinary within that genre, and not up to Dexter at his best. ( )
  Eyejaybee | Mar 3, 2020 |
Morse doesn't always get it right. Sometimes he gets to the point of actually charging a suspect before he realises that he's got it wrong. In fact Lewis thinks that Morse creates scenarios before he looks at the facts. But somehow he gets some elements right and then he plucks something else out of left field, and somehow it all fits.

We listen carefully, just as Lewis does, and eventually Morse persuades us.

We have really been enjoying this set of audio books narrated superbly by Samuel West. ( )
  smik | Dec 29, 2019 |
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» Andere auteurs toevoegen (1 mogelijk)

AuteursnaamRolType auteurWerk?Status
Colin Dexterprimaire auteuralle editiesberekend
Davidson, FrederickVertellerSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd
Terho, IlkkaVertalerSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd
Tull, PatrickVertellerSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd
Whately, KevinVertellerSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd
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Espied the god with gloomy soul
The prize that in the casket lay,
Who came with silent tread and stole
The jewel that was ours away
(Lilian Cooper, 1904-1981)
(Chapter 1)
It is not impossible to become bored in the presence of a mistress
(Stendhal)
(Chapter 2)
For the better cure of vice they think it necessary to study it, and the only efficient study is through practice
(Samuel Butler)
(Chapter 3)
"Oh, come along, Mole, do!" replied the Rat cheerfully, still plodding along.
"Please stop, Ratty!" pleaded the poor Mole, in anguish of heart. "You don't understand! It's my home! My old home! I've just come across the smell of it, and it's close by here, really quite close. And I must go to it"
(Kenneth Grahame, The Wind in the Willows)
(Chapter 4)
"The cockroach Blatella germanica," it was observed darkly in 1926, "was at one time recorded as present in the Randolph Hotel kitchen"
(Jan Morris, Oxford)
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For my wife, Dorothy
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The red-seal Brut Imperial Moët & Chandon stood empty on the top of the bedside table to her left; empty like the champagne glass next to it, and like the champagne glass on the table at the other side of the bed.
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"I'm not thinking at all -- not for the minute," replied Morse loftily. "I am deducing -- deducing the possibilities. When I've done that, I shall begin to think."
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Wikipedia in het Engels (1)

An Inspector Morse Mystery. The case seems so simple that Inspector Morse deems it beneath his notice. A wealthy, elderly American tourist has a heart attack in her room at Oxford's luxurious Randolph Hotel. Missing from the scene is the lady's handbag, which contained the Wolvercote Tongue, a priceless jewel that her late husband had bequeathed to the Ashmolean Museum just across the street. Morse proceeds to spend a great deal of time thinking-and drinking-in the hotel's bar, certain the solution is close at hand, until conflicting stories, suspicious doings, and a real murder convince him otherwise.

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