
Sally Spencer
Author of The Dead Hand of History
About the Author
Series
Works by Sally Spencer
Charles Woodend 1 copy
series 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Rustage, Alan
- Other names
- Woods, James Garcia (pen name)
Spencer, Sally (pen name) - Birthdate
- 1949
- Gender
- male
- Short biography
- Sally Spencer and James García Woods are pseudonyms of Alan Rustage.[from author's website]
Sally Spencer is a pen name, first adopted when the author (actually called Alan Rustage) was writing sagas and it was almost obligatory that a woman's name appeared on the cover (other authors like Emma Blair and Mary Jane Staples are also men). For the Inspector Ruiz series, Alan chose James García Woods, to reflect both the Spanish and English roots of the series.
Before becoming a full-time writer, he was a teacher. In 1978-79 he was working in Iran and witnessed the fall of the Shah (see the Blog for what it was like to live through a revolution). He got used to having rifles - and, one occasion, a rocket launcher - pointed at him by both soldiers and revolutionaries, but he was never entirely comfortable with it.
He lived in Madrid for over twenty years, and still considers it the most interesting and exciting city he has ever visited, but for the last few years he has opted for a quieter life in the seaside town of Calpe, on the Costa Blanca.
His first series of books were historical sagas set in Cheshire (where he grew up) and London. They were very popular with his English readers, but his American readers find the dialect something of a strain.
He has written twenty books featuring DCI Woodend (a character based partly on a furniture dealer he used to play dominoes with) and ten (so far!) about Woodend's protegé Monika Paniatowski.
His DI Sam Blackstone books are set in Victorian/Edwardian London, New York and Russia, and the Inspector Paco Ruiz books have as their backdrop the Spanish Civil War.
Alan is a competitive games player who likes bridge and pub quizzes. It is only by enforcing iron discipline that he doesn't play video games all the time. - Birthplace
- Cheshire, United Kingdom
- Associated Place (for map)
- Cheshire, United Kingdom
Members
Reviews
While DCI Monika Paniatowski lies in a coma, her dispirited team, consisting of acting DCI Colin Beresford, DS Kate Meadows, and DC Jack Crane, are doing their best to carry on without their boss. "Dead End," by Sally Spencer (the pseudonym of Alan Rustage), opens in 1978 and flashes back to 1974. Quite by accident, Monika's daughter, Louisa, a rookie cop, finds a corpse in a Lancashire allotment. Meanwhile, a shadowy group of men, led by an overbearing and smug fellow named Forsyth, are show more determined to make sure that potentially explosive secrets involving murder and espionage remain hidden.
The most entertaining aspect of this novel is its wacky humor, which is a bit reminiscent of Mick Herron at his most sassy and sarcastic. Spencer has a field day portraying Monika's crew of eccentric detectives. Beresford is an unabashed ladies' man; Meadows engages in weird extracurricular activities that might be deemed inappropriate for someone who works in law enforcement; and Crane is an Oxford-educated poet with a sensitive nature. We get to know Monika mostly in the chapters that take place in the past; she is an in-your-face type who does not suffer fools gladly. Others who play an important role are a stern-looking but sensual ward nurse, an adulterous man whose wife detests him, and a husband who physically and verbally abuses his brilliant but downtrodden spouse. These individuals are involved, either directly or peripherally, in the aforementioned conspiracy, and not everyone will emerge unscathed.
It is unfortunate that "Dead End," which had initial promise, culminates with such a dizzying conclusion. When it takes at least ten pages of exposition to explain what really happened, it indicates that there are too many elements competing for our attention. Although some of the elements are intriguing, when the author finally gets around to connecting the dots, the overall picture is jumbled and wearisome. This would have been a far better police procedural had Spencer kept matters simpler. As it stands, there are wry and clever passages that are laugh-out-loud funny, but ultimately, "Dead End" sinks under the weight of its annoyingly cumbersome plot. show less
The most entertaining aspect of this novel is its wacky humor, which is a bit reminiscent of Mick Herron at his most sassy and sarcastic. Spencer has a field day portraying Monika's crew of eccentric detectives. Beresford is an unabashed ladies' man; Meadows engages in weird extracurricular activities that might be deemed inappropriate for someone who works in law enforcement; and Crane is an Oxford-educated poet with a sensitive nature. We get to know Monika mostly in the chapters that take place in the past; she is an in-your-face type who does not suffer fools gladly. Others who play an important role are a stern-looking but sensual ward nurse, an adulterous man whose wife detests him, and a husband who physically and verbally abuses his brilliant but downtrodden spouse. These individuals are involved, either directly or peripherally, in the aforementioned conspiracy, and not everyone will emerge unscathed.
It is unfortunate that "Dead End," which had initial promise, culminates with such a dizzying conclusion. When it takes at least ten pages of exposition to explain what really happened, it indicates that there are too many elements competing for our attention. Although some of the elements are intriguing, when the author finally gets around to connecting the dots, the overall picture is jumbled and wearisome. This would have been a far better police procedural had Spencer kept matters simpler. As it stands, there are wry and clever passages that are laugh-out-loud funny, but ultimately, "Dead End" sinks under the weight of its annoyingly cumbersome plot. show less
The Red Herring by Sally Spencer
Inspector Woodend Series Book # 7
4 Stars
From The Book:
The discovery of the body of a young, red-haired school mistress, lying in a pig-pen with her face half-eaten away, is the beginning of a new investigation for Charlie Woodend. But it is to be an investigation he is soon ordered to abandon when Helen Dunn, the daughter of Wing Commander Dunn - and a pupil at the school where the dead woman taught - suddenly vanishes into thin air. While Woodend and Rutter show more race against time in the desperate hope of finding the girl alive, Woodend's bagman, Monika Paniatowski, continues to work on the murder, under the supervision of the mysterious Chief Inspector Horrocks, a Scotland Yard man who seems to have only a mild interest in finding the killer. Are the two cases connected? Woodend begins to wonder. And if they are, who is it who seems to be blocking both investigations at every turn?
My Views:
I just discovered this author and this series and must say that I find the stories really interesting with gripping, creative plots. They are not the usual types of mystery and suspense books that I usually read but they are a refreshing break. They are not "cozies" by any means and will satisfy anyone that wants a well plotted mystery with plenty of clues to help you try and solve the crime without the contents of the grittier ones. show less
Inspector Woodend Series Book # 7
4 Stars
From The Book:
The discovery of the body of a young, red-haired school mistress, lying in a pig-pen with her face half-eaten away, is the beginning of a new investigation for Charlie Woodend. But it is to be an investigation he is soon ordered to abandon when Helen Dunn, the daughter of Wing Commander Dunn - and a pupil at the school where the dead woman taught - suddenly vanishes into thin air. While Woodend and Rutter show more race against time in the desperate hope of finding the girl alive, Woodend's bagman, Monika Paniatowski, continues to work on the murder, under the supervision of the mysterious Chief Inspector Horrocks, a Scotland Yard man who seems to have only a mild interest in finding the killer. Are the two cases connected? Woodend begins to wonder. And if they are, who is it who seems to be blocking both investigations at every turn?
My Views:
I just discovered this author and this series and must say that I find the stories really interesting with gripping, creative plots. They are not the usual types of mystery and suspense books that I usually read but they are a refreshing break. They are not "cozies" by any means and will satisfy anyone that wants a well plotted mystery with plenty of clues to help you try and solve the crime without the contents of the grittier ones. show less
The Witch Maker by Sally Spencer
DCI Woodend series Book #11
4.5 Stars
From The Book:
To be Witch Makers in the moorland village of Hallerton is both a great honor and a heavy burden. But this Witch Maker never lives to witness his moment of triumph and is discovered tied to the Witching Post early one morning with a length of twine wrapped tightly around his neck. Will DCI Charlie Woodend solve this mystery?
My Thoughts:
I enjoyed this book much more than I had thought I would. Sally Spenser did show more an outstanding job of portraying the small village and the strangeness of the people that inhabited it. The reader felt that they had been dropped into a time capsule and transported back 350 years. It seems that DCI Woodend and his Sergeant Monika Paniatowski also had that feeling...but while they were sorting out how to handle this case...another...seeming unrelated murder is dropped on their plates.
The story features a suspenseful and well-developed story line. A surprise ending and several semi-Gothic elements along with quaint setting and the sense of dark foreboding...all adds up to a first rate mystery. show less
DCI Woodend series Book #11
4.5 Stars
From The Book:
To be Witch Makers in the moorland village of Hallerton is both a great honor and a heavy burden. But this Witch Maker never lives to witness his moment of triumph and is discovered tied to the Witching Post early one morning with a length of twine wrapped tightly around his neck. Will DCI Charlie Woodend solve this mystery?
My Thoughts:
I enjoyed this book much more than I had thought I would. Sally Spenser did show more an outstanding job of portraying the small village and the strangeness of the people that inhabited it. The reader felt that they had been dropped into a time capsule and transported back 350 years. It seems that DCI Woodend and his Sergeant Monika Paniatowski also had that feeling...but while they were sorting out how to handle this case...another...seeming unrelated murder is dropped on their plates.
The story features a suspenseful and well-developed story line. A surprise ending and several semi-Gothic elements along with quaint setting and the sense of dark foreboding...all adds up to a first rate mystery. show less
Hidden, The: A British Police Procedural set in 1970's England (A Monika Paniatowski Mystery) by Sally Spencer
We get to see more of Monik’s team since she is away when the story opens. I thought at first that it wasn’t going to be the same series without the “star of the show”…but Sally Spenser took the courage to allow these side characters to carry on without “The Boss”. Crane, Meadows and Beresford, make the decision to risk their own careers and start an investigation since Dixon…the actual boss…is, as usual, more interested in bringing in fast results than he is in finding the show more truth. How do these people get into the positions that they hold? It was also extremely frustrating that Monika could do nothing to help her team. Overall it was a good story in the life of Monika Paniatoeski. The one thing I have had a problem with from the very first of this series, is that the police don’t act like actual police officers would act…and how much they argue and disagree with the rest of their fellow officers....but it IS fiction. I’m curious enough to see where Sally Spencer plans to take this series from here to continue it for a while longer. show less
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 77
- Members
- 1,505
- Popularity
- #17,076
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 44
- ISBNs
- 293
- Languages
- 2














