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Holy Disorders by Edmund Crispin
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Holy Disorders (Gervase Fen Mysteries)

by Edmund Crispin

Series: Gervase Fen (2)

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195430,209 (3.91)13
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Felony & Mayhem (2006), Paperback, 240 pages

Member:DollyBantry
Collections:Your libraryRating:***
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An extremely enjoyable detective novel, combining the typical twists and turns, moments of comedy, and in the case of Gervase Fen, a vocabulary bordering on the gargantuan. Have a dictionary to hand. Be warned, too, that this book is extremely pretentious. The joke about Gibbon and Waugh made me laugh, but perhaps others will be less than impressed. ( )
  philipblue | Jul 20, 2009 |
This is an uneven book, however, it is worth reading, if only for chapter eight, a total send-up of Poe's "The Raven". Revenge for those of us who had to sit through it in school. ( )
  DollyBantry | Oct 21, 2008 |
More somber than some Gervase Fen books due to the war background and the witchcraft theme. I always enjoy Crispin's writing. ( )
  hedera | Sep 27, 2008 |
Set in a cathedral town in England during WWII, this is the second Gervase Fen murdery mystery. A church organist is first driven mad then murdered. The choirmaster is also murdered, and there is a dastardly plot that includes a wireless, an ancient haunting, and a modern romance. Fen is his usual eccentric self. The characters are all very well drawn. This is the second book in which a friend of Fen's is drawn into the action. I laughed out loud quite a lot and had to resort to the dictionary quite a lot too.

There is an absolutely hilarious scene where Fen and his friend Geoffrey are interviewing a clergyman who has a pet raven. He is blissfully ignorant of the poem by EA Poe and Fen and Geoffrey get rather hysterical quoting it and having Garbin take what they say literally. ( )
1 vote karenmarie | Apr 7, 2008 |
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To my parents
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As his taxi burrowed its way through the traffic outside Waterloo Station, like an over-zealous bee barging to the front of a dilatory swarm, Geoffrey Vintner re-read the letter and telegram which he had found on his breakfast table that morning.
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0380515083, Paperback)

Gervase Fen--the eccentric Oxford don with a knack for solving “impossible” crimes--made his debut in The Case of the Gilded Fly, which Edmund Crispin (in reality, composer Bruce Montgomery) wrote to win a bet. With Holy Disorders, Crispin’s skills matured, but Fen remains as maddeningly childish as ever, still deliciously fond of his own wit and erudition, and given to quoting Lewis Carroll at inappropriate occasions. First published in 1945, Holy Disorders takes Fen to the town of Tolnbridge, where he is happily bounding around with a butterfly net until the cathedral organist is murdered, giving Fen the chance to play sleuth. The man didn’t have an enemy in the world, and even his music was inoffensive: Could he have fallen afoul of a nest of German spies or of the local coven of witches, ominously rumored to have been practicing since the 17th century? Tracking down the answer pleases Fen immensely--only the reader will have a better time. This, said the New York Times Book Review, is “Fen at his very best.”

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:53 -0400)

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