
Web Crawlers
Podcast
A body found in the rooftop water tank of the Cecil Hotel in Los Angeles. A UFO sighting in rural...
gossip conspiracy paranormal crime ufo aliens

Lore - Season 2
TV Season Watch
From the executive producer of The Walking Dead and the executive producer of The X-Files, this...

The English Breakfast Murder
Book
It is a truly exhilarating experience for Indigo Tea Shop owner Theodosia Browning-helping...

The Dark (2018)
Movie Watch
An undead teenage girl befriends a blind boy that she meets in a forest she haunts and hunts in....

Kevin Phillipson (10072 KP) rated Doctor who creature from the pit in TV
Dec 22, 2021

Poison Pen
Book
"IT WAS FUN WHILE IT LASTED." Those were the words on the suicide note found near Lindsey...

Baghead (2023)
Movie
Following the death of her estranged father iris learns she has inherited a run- down centuries-old...

7 Day Sugar-Free Detox
Food & Drink and Health & Fitness
App
Sugar is in everything these days, from boxed cereals to pasta sauces; it's almost impossible to...

ClareR (5885 KP) rated Death of an Old Girl in Books
Sep 19, 2018
The body of an 'old girl' is found in the art room after the annual reunion ('Festival') of the Old Girls. Beatrice Baynes had remained near her old school, living within walking distance, and had a reputation of being a busy body - and quite unpleasant with it. When her body is found, Scotland Yard send Inspector Pollard and Sergeant Toye to solve the murder.
I've read quite a few police procedurals recently, and the modern version can be gritty, violent and very graphic. This isn't any of those things. I do assume that it portrays the way in which murders were investigated back then quite well (I'd have to ask my Dad. He was in the Met Police in London in the 1960s, 70s and 80s!). Although I'm pretty sure that the investigating officers weren't all as pleasant as Pollard and Toye.
I loved all the old language ("frocks" for one!) and attitudes, even if they were very old fashioned. It's just so different to what's on offer now.
Well worth a read - and it's interesting to note that the Pollard and Toye series consisted of something like 19 books! Lots to be getting on with!