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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Unforgiven Surprise, January 16, 2002
By A Customer
With the victim's identity more sensational than the murder, we have an English mystery by Andrew Taylor. Mr. Taylor holds excitement like strings of a puppet and uses each one to keep the reader probing different directions. No one is sure who the killer might be until he is able to understand who the victim is. Don't stop once you begin reading. The story unfolds carefully toward the surprising end.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
`They say November used to be called the month of the dead.', April 29, 2010
Set in the 1950s in Lydmouth, an ancient market town on the border between England and Wales. Two newcomers to Lydmouth: Jill Francis and Detective Inspector Richard Thornhill become involved in investigating a mystery. Both, as becomes clear during the story, are caught up with issues in their own lives. Jill, recovering from an emotional experience of her own, is visiting with her former colleague Philip and his wife Charlotte. Detective Inspector Thornhill and his family have their own adjustments to make to life in Lydmouth. It is the week before Remembrance Sunday. When workmen demolishing an old inn discover a small box, a brooch, a scrap of old newspaper, and the pitiful remains of a newborn baby in a disused privy, the police are called in to investigate. How old are the remains? Could they be related to a woman tried in a celebrated Victorian murder trial? Who is involved in this case, and what is the truth? In looking for answers, Detective Inspector Thornhill finds that there are many more questions and a number of the inhabitants of Lydmouth have secrets which they'd rather not share. I enjoyed this novel (published in 1995), and I'm looking forward to reading Mr Taylor's other novels - including the series of which this book is the first instalment. Jennifer Cameron-Smith
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Introducing Lydmouth, March 11, 2010
Lydmouth is small, postwar English town along the Welsh border, a place that has seen better days. Still, newly promoted CID Richard Thornhill eagerly accepted a position on the Lydmouth police force. But he and his family are having some problems adapting to their new home. Successful London journalist Jill Francis accepts an invitation from friends to stay with them in Lydmouth, while recovering from an emotional experience that only becomes clear as the story develops. Complicating Jill's recovery is the uncomfortable fact that she and her host were once an item, and his wife is well aware of that. A further complication is the small box unearthed by some constructions workers , one of whom is the town's ne'er-do-well. An Air that Kills is one of Andrew Taylor's early novels, and while it lacks the edge that characterizes his recent books (Bleeding Heart Square, An Unpardonable Crime, The Roth Trilogy), his potential is evident from the very first page. This is a dark-ish tale , in which old wounds are reopened and both protagonists and neighbors have plenty of secrets of their own. Taylor is adept at using gothic elements in a thoroughly modern way, avoiding melodrama while building suspense via the insertion of subtle psychological suggestion. His skillful plotting and his ability to draw readers into time and place are unrivaled. Taylor deserves a much wider American readership. Highly recommended. I look forward to the next entry in this series.
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