The Modern Peasant: Adventures in City Food
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This is the winner of the Fortnum & Mason Food Book of the year award 2014. Inspired by those who...
The Hellion is Tamed (League of Lords #4)
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Time-traveling lovers navigate the sinister streets of London—while denying their enchantment and...
Paranormal Romance Historical Victorian
The Girl in the Steel Corset (Steampunk Chronicles, #1)
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In 1897 London, sixteen-year-old Finley Jayne has no one…except the ‘thing’ inside her. ...
Prisoner 4374 by A.J. Griffiths-Jones
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For more than a century, Dr. Thomas Neill Cream has been listed as a potential 'Jack the Ripper'...
Jack the Ripper: Case Closed
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London. 1894. 'I am not a detective, chief constable.' 'No, but you are a poet, a freemason...
Phil Leader (619 KP) rated Great Expectations in Books
Nov 13, 2019
For me Great Expectations is the archetypal Dickens novel, in that it is very uneven and full of dull and tiresome sections which do little to advance the plot but instead let Dickens show off his love of absurd names and his observations of social hierarchies in Victorian London.
The first part is fine - after the rather clumsy opening paragraph. The scenes on the marshes are evocative, Stella is well portrayed as the unobtainable target of his affections and Miss Havisham steals the show.
It is when Pip arrives in London that it all starts to go wrong. The characters become flat and two dimensional, only there to demonstrate how he is progressing in his quest to become a gentleman, the usual Dickens tool of the name that slightly indicates their character frequently used instead of actually providing them with any character. Very little of this section is actually relevant to the plot in hand and just seems to be filler to pad the book to the requisite number of episodes.
Once Pip returns home for the final chapters and the big reveal the story once again picks up as the various plot strands laid in the first part come together.
Overall the first and last parts of the book are worth reading, but the middle bit can be safely skimmed through as the reader won't miss anything important and will avoid much tedium.
A Lady’s Guide to Etiquette and Murder
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In this exciting historical mystery debut set in Victorian England, a wealthy young widow encounters...
Deborah (162 KP) rated The Yard: Book 1 in Books
Dec 21, 2018
Our main protagonist is Inspector Day, who is new to London, previously having been a constable in Devon, but now living in the Big Smoke with his wife, Claire. He is ably assisted by other members of the force, including constable Hammersmith. There is a also Kingsley, who has made himself unofficial police surgeon. The forensic bits with Kingsley are a bit macabre in some ways, but I also found them very interesting. I did wonder if some of the detail in the book was based on fact. Obviously it wasn't a real case and I'm not sure the characters are based on actual people (I daresay there could be some borrowing of characteristics, but nothing is mentioned).
It's over 500 pages long, but I seemed to get through it in no time at all! Many of the chapters are actually quite short. There are three interludes along the way, so we get a bit of back story on the three main characters (as mentioned above). There's also a fair bit seen from the point of view of the murderer, so we actually know 'whodunit' from quite early on. Somehow, this doesn't stop this from being a ripping read though!
The book reads as if it's due to be the first in a series and I think I'd be interested in reading Grecian's next offering.
River Effra: South London's Secret Spine
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London was once a city awash with watercourses. Most of these streams and small rivers have long...
Stand Up & Sock it to Them Sister: Funny, Feisty Females
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"Funny is Funny" Joan Rivers But how do you make it in the world of comedy if you are a woman? With...

