5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
not quite up to the usual Campion, August 24, 2008
If you're read quite a lot of Allingham's work, you can definitely tell that this is not the way she would have written it.
"Mr. Campion's Farthing" is really a Kopeck -- one Vassily Kopeck who has seemingly defected from the USSR (let us not forget that this was written in 1969 originally and thus we're into the cold war years). Kopeck was last seen at a quaint house/hotel called The Turrets, which tries ever so hard to stay in Victorian character and is often used by those in the public eye that want to have a little unpublic fun. The owner of the Turrets is one Lottie Cambric, and she is possibly the last one to have seen Kopeck. Now everyone seems to be after him; Campion wants to know why this man is so important.
Just kind of a mediocre read; nothing at all like the earlier novels that I've enjoyed so much. With this book, I will probably say goodbye to Mr. Campion, whose exploits have provided me with hours upon hours of good reading time.
You may want to read it if you're involved with the rest of the series (but don't do them out of order, please), or if you want something dealing with UK-USSR tensions during the Cold War. Other than that, well,it's just not our good old Albert Campion here.
bye-bye, Bertie....I'll miss you.
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