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Indlæser... The Case of Sonia Wayward (Penguin crime fiction) (original 1960; udgave 1989)af Michael Innes
Work InformationThe New Sonia Wayward af Michael Innes (1960)
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Bliv medlem af LibraryThing for at finde ud af, om du vil kunne lide denne bog. Der er ingen diskussionstråde på Snak om denne bog. When Sonia Wayward suddenly dies on a yachting holiday, her husband pitches her overboard and takes over writing her novels, their main source of income. Unfortunately, pretending she is alive and still writing leaves him open to blackmail as a possible murderer. Mrs. Gotlop's cocktail party halfway through the book was the funniest thing in this comedy-suspense novel. I had read it before but I didn't really remember till quite near the end. An amusing dark comedy. Not a mystery, and technically there's not even a murder. A not-too-smart overly class-conscious Colonel is on a yachting trip with his wife, a successful romance novelist, when she suddenly drops dead, of natural causes. This is more of a bother to him. In the first of many bad moves, he decides, while drunk, that it will be simpler if he just tosses the body overboard to avoid questions when he returns. Since she was his meal ticket, he decides that he can writer under name as well as she did. Thus ends chapter one. Pretty much one woe after another follows, but the more you know the Colonel, the more you loathe him, so it all works out. This would have made a classic episode of the hour-long Alfred Hitchcock television series. Recommended. So much fun! Clever writing, great plot, British wit--I really must read more of this author. (Note: 5 stars = amazing, wonderful, 4 = very good book, 3 = decent read, 2 = disappointing, 1 = awful, just awful. I'm fairly good at picking for myself so end up with a lot of 4s). I feel a lot of readers automatically render any book they enjoy 5, but I grade on a curve! Sonia Wayward is a well known writer of formula romance novels. When she suddenly drops dead while on a yachting holiday, her husband, Colonel Petticate, slips her body overboard and proceeds to cover up her death, telling people that Sonia has gone abroad on a little holiday. He finishes her current novel and submits it for publication and is not at all surprised in the slightest that this book is very well received. He is prepared to carry on with his deception in order to continue living his comfortable life of ease and quiet refinement. The New Sonia Wayward is a very clever book, but does ask for a huge leap of faith from its readers to believe that Colonel Petticate would throw his wife’s body overboard. It is never fully explained why he wouldn’t report her natural death and then carry on living from the royalties that she has acquired. However, as you read about this character, his actions seem to fit in with his rather nasty self-serving personality. “Oh what a tangled web we weave, when first we practise to deceive”! This old saying certainly fits as Colonel Petticate has a difficult time to keep things from unravelling and is struggling to keep the truth from surfacing. Both it’s withering look at the literary world and following Petticate as he sweats through the various complications that arise made for a very humorous read. Added to that is the author’s light prose and spirited dialogue which elevated The New Sonia Wayward to a much higher level. ingen anmeldelser | tilføj en anmeldelse
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Colonel Ffolliot Petticate's predicament begins when his novelist wife, Sonia, drowns during a sailing trip in the English Channel. A dramatic cover-up ensues in a tale full of humour, irony and devastating suspense. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Indlæser... GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.912Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1901-1945LC-klassificeringVurderingGennemsnit:
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Instead, the responses are better explicable due to different readers' preferences for mysteries/detective novels that are:
- clue based;
- plot driven;
- character driven;
- incorporating literary or other allusions (or not); or
- procedural driven etc.
I don't mind many of the Innes novels, even though some can be a little unrealistic. The New Sonia Wayward is a case in point. Sonia, is/was a reasonable successful romance novel writer and the main source of income for herself and her husband (retired Colonel Petticate). Sonia dies of natural causes whilst travelling on a yacht with Petticate.
Rather than do what one might think be the sensible thing, Petticate throws his deceased wife overboard and engages in pretending that Sonia has departed for foreign climes to concentrate on her latest book, with the aim that Petticate will continue writing her novels (as her ghost writer), thereby keeping the money coming in.
The book addresses the challenges that Petticate faces in convincing their many contacts that all is well, ranging from the family doctor, their friends and relatives, Sonia's publisher, their live in servants, etc. That last one is a bit of a surprise...Petticate and Sonia are not depicted as being rolling in cash and one wonders, even for a book first published in 1960, such is realistic. But as it adds another category of people Petticate needs to deal with, such is a positive for the narrative.
One would imagine that Petticate just has to come a cropper at some stage, and it is amusing to try to predict how that is going to come about. As it turns out, there is a twist at the end which beautifully leaves one scratching one's head.
A quick read at 174 pages, and well worth a read if you are looking for (as one review (Evening Standard) described as ) 'A polished, urban, and funny thriller.'
Stewart is also notorious in Australia, whilst holding the position of Jury Professor of English in the University of Adelaide, South Australia, having been asked during WW2 to give a lecture on Australian literature, declared that as there wasn't any (Australian literature that is), he would instead talk about D H Lawrence's 'Kangaroo'.
Don't hold that against him!
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8 August 2022 ( )