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Bezig met laden... The Damascened Blade (2003)door Barbara Cleverly
Bezig met laden...
Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. This is a formulaic mystery set in the Indian-Afghani frontier in the 1920s. Stock characters include the headstrong American heiress, the Scotland Yard copper, various war weary British soldiery, a suspicious doctor, Machiavellian politicians, grasping Lords and bloodthirsty locals. It's a fun mystery, but wildly improbable with a ridiculously convoluted plot. It would make a good addition to the BBC/PBS Mystery series. ( ) The third of the Joe Sandilands mystery series. Joe ended the Great War stuck in India and he can’t seem to ever make it home. Here he begins taking a vacation to the NW frontier to visit one of his mates from the war. Unluckily for him, he gets a call and finds himself assigned to protect an American heiress who is looking for the mystery, magic and exotic wonders of India. She didn’t find that in Simla where she’d been pretty much locked up in the British cantonment, so she weedles her way to the one place where a shooting war could break out any time. Not long after she arrives, along with some British high mucky mucks, a Pathan group arrive to escort a doctor through the Kyber Pass to Kabul. On the night of the welcoming dinner, one of the guests ends up poisoned. I love this series, set in the 20s, and Joe is an interesting mix of stern DCI and military type who understands how politics can complicate matters. Lovely local color and always an exotic feel for this series. More like 3 1/2. The plot got really bogged down in the middle part, if not for that it would have earn 4 stars. The women characters were really well done. From Betty, the officer's wife, competent and bright (pregnant too) to Grace, the elderly doctor on a mission to Lily, the young American free spirit. Even secondary women characters with only cameo, I'm thinking about the Australian gypsy and the young chief's wife were bright lights in this novel. It's rare that you get so many strong, competent, smart female characters all at once. Now the story, this is the British Indian and what is now Pakistan frontier in the 1920's. Tribal wars, feuds, grudges and revenge. We join Joe Sandilands, Cleverly's hero, in his next adventure. A fort at the edge of the wilderness, a dead visitor that has the potential to bring out full out tribal war. A list of suspect to death that may or may not be murder. The overall idea is good, the resolution is good, it's the execution that brings down the pace. There are secondary characters that we don't need to know so much about. I'm thinking of the British Air Force officer or the Delhi bureaucrat. They have their role to play into the plot but too much time was spend on their background. Unless Cleverly plans on bringing them back. So good characters, good plot overall but slow pace. Number Three in the Joe Sandilands series. This one finds him in a remote outpost on the North West Frontier (then of British India, now, without the caps, of Pakistan). Joe is trying to keep a wandering American heiress out of trouble, but trouble accumulates immediately, as does an interesting group of characters. Very enjoyable, mostly for the atmosphere, but also for a perfectly competent mystery. geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
Onderdeel van de reeks(en)Is opgenomen in
Fiction.
Mystery.
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyLC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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