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Ladataan... A Clubbable Woman (1970)Tekijä: Reginald Hill
![]() Ei tämänhetkisiä Keskustelu-viestiketjuja tästä kirjasta. Very quaint, small regional rugby club, pubs, mid-sized town police. This book would be improved by 33% reduction. The middle was a hard slog. Denouement required objects and people that had not appeared prior to that time. Neanderthal depictions of men's reactions to women, but secondary characters have loving relationships where women are valued. I love all of Reginald Hill's books, and especially the long-running Dalziel and Pascoe series, but until very recently I'd never read this first in the series. It's thirty-seven years old, for instance, and the series had developed so far that this was bound to be a disappointment. I need not have worried. All the Hill trademarks are there: the tight-knit community with its hidden undercurrents of ill-feeling; a complex web of intrigues; more twists than a Dales byway. I love all of Reginald Hill's books, and especially the long-running Dalziel and Pascoe series, but until very recently I'd never read this first in the series. It's thirty-seven years old, for instance, and the series had developed so far that this was bound to be a disappointment. I need not have worried. All the Hill trademarks are there: the tight-knit community with its hidden undercurrents of ill-feeling; a complex web of intrigues; more twists than a Dales byway. I read on EYEJAYBEE's thread a while ago that this was the first of the Dalziel and Pascoe police procedurals, and as I loved the TV shows, I thought I'd give it a try. The reprint I received through paperbackswap was put out by felonyandmayhem.com, the imprint that grew out of one of my favorite bookshops, Partners & Crime, now, alas, closed. But the publishing imprint remains, and it looks like they are building their list. Hooray. This first in the series is quite good, with lots going on and more hinted at, although Hill states he had no thought of a series when he wrote it. I learned a (very) little about rugby, a bit more about the inevitable and disruptive building booms in the British Isles, and a lot about how people can be nasty by nature. If a hint of misogyny puts you off, this isn't a book for you, but I think it might accurately represent a smallish community centered on a game like rugby with its masculine biases set in a class-conscious society. The denouement is quite original. ei arvosteluja | lisää arvostelu
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'So far out in front that he need not bother looking over his shoulder' Sunday Telegraph Detective Superintendent Andy Dalziel investigates murder close to home in this first crime novel featuring the much-loved detective team of Dalziel and Pascoe. Home from the Rugby club after taking a nasty knock in a match, Sam Connon finds his wife more uncommunicative than usual. After passing out on his bed for a few hours, he comes downstairs to discover communication has been cut off forever - by a hole in the middle of her forehead. Andy Dalziel, a long-standing member of the club, wants to run the murder investigation along his own lines. But DS Peter Pascoe's loyalties lie elsewhere and he has quite different ideas about how the case should proceed. Kirjastojen kuvailuja ei löytynyt. |
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Review of the Grafton Books paperback (1987) of the Collins Crime Club hardcover original (1970)
Mick Herron, the author of the Slough House aka Slow Horses (2010-ongoing) espionage series, has acknowledged that part of the inspiration for the slovenly and flatulent head of the Slough House department of misfit agents of the security service was from Reginald Hill's Detective Superintendent Andy Dalziel (pronounced Dee-El) of the Dalziel & Pascoe police detective series (1970-2009).
Having recently complete a binge read of the Slough House novels, I also came across my archive collection of the early Dalziel & Pascoe paperbacks from the 1980s in a storage locker clean-out. Curiosity about the Jackson Lamb inspiration had some satisfactory confirmations as one can read in the sample text excerpts above.
See photograph at https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FZkxI4CXkAAu2sG?format=jpg&name=large
Book haul of the early Dalziel and Pascoe paperbacks, mostly from Grafton Books in the 1980s. Image sourced from Twitter.
The story itself was not that much of an inspiration though. It feels badly dated with the members of a community rugby club coming under suspicion for the apparent murder of the wife of one of its local heroes. There is a lot of leching for each other's wives, poison pen letters, opportunistic voyeurs and a cringe-inducing scene where the (of-age) teenage daughter of the murder victim allows herself to be fondled by an older man in order to glean some possible investigative information due to his knowledge of local gossip. The erstwhile investigators barely solve anything except that a confession is finally provoked without any especially dramatic confrontation. Not a great start to the series, but I'll probably give it a few more re-reads before I decide to abandon it.
See DVD cover at https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BMTc4OTYxNzA1Ml5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwMTg2MzYz...
Cover image of the Series 1 boxset of the "Dalziel & Pascoe" TV series. Image sourced from IMDb.
Trivia and No Link
A Clubbable Woman was adapted for the long running TV series of Dalziel and Pascoe (1996-2007) as Episode 1 of Series 1. I could not find an online trailer or posting of the episode. (