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Winter of Discontent (Dorothy Martin Mysteries, No. 9)
 
 
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Winter of Discontent (Dorothy Martin Mysteries, No. 9) [Hardcover]

Jeanne M. Dams (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 18, 2004
Dorothy Martin's neighbor and closest friend, Jane Langland, has been having a fling with Bill Fanshawe--or, as much of a fling as two 80-year olds in a small town are allowed. Now there are rumors that Jane and Bill may move in together, and Dorothy needs to know exactly what's happening. What neither woman expects is that Bill is missing, and that within a day his body is going to be discovered in the tunnel under the Sherebury town museum.

Why would anyone want to harm a harmless old man, a historian who loves the town and the people who live there? Given his age, and the strange letter found in his hand, Dorothy thinks that whatever happened has its roots in WWII. Everyone, including her husband, retired police office Alan, looks askance, but when another old man is murdered--a man who served at the same RAF base as Bill--no one denies Dorothy's suspicions may be right.

Dorothy investigates, knowing that the best Christmas gift she can give her friend Jane is the truth about what happened to Bill. And Jane has a surprise of her own for Dorothy...


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Amateur sleuth Dorothy Martin sets aside Christmas preparations in order to look into the disappearance of her best friend's beau in Agatha-winner Dams's captivating ninth mystery to feature the expatriate American living in the medieval English town of Sherebury (after 2003's Sins Out of School). When the body of Bill Fanshawe, curator of the local museum, turns up in the museum's basement, Dorothy determines to find out who killed Bill and why, not only for the sake of her friend, Jane Langland, but for herself. With only a few puzzling clues to guide her, including a map of Indiana, she must sort out the conflicting information she gathers from the quirky and elderly characters who knew Bill during WWII. A revelation that even Dorothy could not have anticipated concludes a cozy as comforting as a hot cup of tea and as deliciously spicy as one of Dorothy's mince pies.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Sixtyish American Dorothy Martin is facing Christmas in Sherebury, England, and she is not prepared, despite the support of her husband, retired from the Sherebury police, and her best friend, Jane. Then an old lover of Jane's is found dead in the tunnels beneath the local museum where he worked. Dorothy is fascinated by her friend's stalwart and unsentimental approach to loss, but when a local university student who also worked at the museum is attacked, both women begin a search through archives and interviews of the now quite elderly collection of RAF vets in the area. Quite fascinating RAF history is revealed in these conversations, as Dorothy uses her husband's contacts and her own American approach to get beyond British resolve. The truth is extracted from secrets as old as humankind, secrets concealing treachery, lies, and heartbreak, but Christmas comes, and so does resolution. Dams has a steadily growing audience, and her latest will be eagerly awaited. GraceAnne DeCandido
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Forge Books; First Edition edition (November 18, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765308053
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765308054
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.7 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #971,526 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A disappointing book from this author, April 12, 2005
By 
This review is from: Winter of Discontent (Dorothy Martin Mysteries, No. 9) (Hardcover)
I would agree with others who have said that the ending was disappointing -- only I would have had harsher words -- there's a totally unnecessary "twist" that I could only describe as incredible -- meaning not believable. And the underlying "secret" is also incredible -- implausible -- you could demolish the whole idea in minutes because it doesn't make a lot of sense.

But -- the descriptions of living in an English cathedral town, complete with endless cups of tea and bad weather, have their charm, and perhaps that's what kept me reading. Also, as I was reading, I was waiting for an explanation that would make sense. It never came, but by that point, I was done with the book.

The plot involves secrets from the past that are being explored by an older hat-wearing American expat Dorothy Martin (who is married to retired British police inspector and living in a very old house in the Cathedral close). Bill, the octogenarian "boyfriend" of Dorothy's best friend Jane, has vanished, and no-one can find him. Then another character is found unconscious, the victim of an attack -- is it connected to Bill's disappearance?

In sum, this book just didn't deliver the goods as a mystery.

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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Enjoyable until the disappointing ending, January 31, 2005
By 
This review is from: Winter of Discontent (Dorothy Martin Mysteries, No. 9) (Hardcover)
Fans of the Dorothy Martin series (and I am certainly one) will probably be happy with this book, at least until the last few pages. It is always good to be back with Dorothy and her husband and their friend Jane.

The hard part about reviewing this is that I don't want to reveal the plot. This is not one of the best of the series. There are a few logical holes which I would probably be willing to forget completely if I didn't find the denouement of the mystery so annoying. The windup of the entire book is a little hard to buy, but so charming that I'm happy to accept it, expecting to see the welcome addition of another likeable character.

The resolution of the mystery is very disappointing to me. I think that Dams may realize that she is on shaky ground and that is why she has worked so hard, a little too hard, to make the murderer unsympathetic - otherwise, readers might be wanting to help pay the defense attorney, er, barrister. I wonder why she developed such a plot in the first place. I cannot like the characters'(Dams') argument that heinous crimes become irrelevant with time, and that justice is unnecessary if the perpetrator's later personal life is disappointing. Extenuating circumstances are for the judge to consider when passing sentence, not a reason for the police to fail to make arrests. The murderer suffered disappointments too - why not gloss over the recent crimes as well? Only at the last do the police remark that it would probably not be possible to prove the earlier crime - it sounds more like a rationalization than a reason.

If this were the first Dorothy Martin that I had read I probably wouldn't read another, and I would certainly have given it a lower rating. Since I really enjoyed the rest of the books, I'll assume that that series are always a little uneven, and look hopefully forward to the next installment.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Murder among the World War II generation, February 24, 2005
This review is from: Winter of Discontent (Dorothy Martin Mysteries, No. 9) (Hardcover)
When museum curator Bill Fanshawe vanishes just days before he is supposed to marry her best friend, Dorothy Martin swings into action. It's too late for Bill, and almost too late for his assistant--who is attacked in the museum. Dorothy decides the attack must relate to Bill's World War II service in the Royal Air Force. World War II veterans are a dying group, but Dorothy and her friend Jane are able to track down a few survivors. Still, what possible memories from a war more than sixty years in that past could justify assault--or even murder.

Dorothy discovers that sixty years matters relatively little to the English--who are still taking sides from the English Civil War of the 1600s. Those connected with Bill's air unit have strong memories--and continued anger over their losses and the way the war was fought.

Author Jeanne M. Dams's aging protagonist worries about her own health and future as she sees the decline in the WWII generation. Despite this, Dorothy is hard to really like--or identify with. Her leaps to conclusion--that Bill's death must have something to do with the war (because he hadn't done anything in the sixty years since?), yet her failure to really get at the recently donated items is hard to understand. Because Dorothy had relatively few stakes in the outcome of the investigation, reader interest is also reduced.

WINTER OF DISCONTENT is easy to read and engaging enough to be hard to put down. The 'American in England' approach lets American readers see England through American eyes--allowing the author to comment on aspects of society and history that an English protagonist would simply take for granted. I wish, though, that Dorothy could have been a bit more clever, endangered, or active--increasing my interest in the plot
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Leigh Burton, Heatherwood House, Barbara Price, Miss Price, Stanley Rutherford, Bill Fanshawe, Town Hall, John Merrifield, Canterbury House, Miss Langland, Walter Tubbs, Dorothy Martin, High Street, Jane Langland, Rolling Prairie, World War, Air Force, Ice Princess, James Wilson, Cathedral Close
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