4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
What shall I do without Bryant and May?, August 5, 2008
This review is from: The Victoria Vanishes (Hardcover)
First Sentence: She had four and a half minutes left to live.
Pathologist Oswald Finch is dead, May has been diagnosed with a tumor on his heart and Bryant has submitted his resignation letter. On his way home from Finch's wake, Bryant notices a woman going into a pub. The woman is later found dead and when they go to investigate, the pub is gone. In fact, it had been torn down over 75 years ago. But someone is killing women in, or near, pubs not usually their own.
The principal appeal of this book is the relationship between the characters, particularly Bryant and Mays, the bantering dialogue and the humor. We learn much more about the characters backgrounds.
But it is also the insightful musing of the author and the characters that made this book stand apart from the rest. There is a fascinating look at and history of some of London's pubs but also thoughts on London past and present and the value of an historic perspective. Fowler's descriptions create powerful visual images.
There is also a very good, suspenseful mystery. Just when you think the mystery is solved, there is a second layer to it.
There is a highly unlikely element and one significant proofreading error, but those did not detract from my absolute enjoyment of this book, which made me laugh, think and, in some ways, touched my heart.
This appears to be the final book in the Bryant and Mays series. I have loved this series and shall miss it.
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