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Can Inspector C. D. Sloan find his man when a dismembered appendage appears at a local farm in this mystery by CWA Diamond Dagger winner Catherine Aird? When the Berebury Footpaths Society created their locally infamous motto, "Every walk a challenge," they couldn't have known just how apt it would be. Avid hikers Wendy Lamport and Gordon Briggs suffer from a good walk spoiled when, while reclaiming a public footpath from the greedy barbed-wire fences of encroaching farmers, a crow drops a show more severed human finger at their feet. And where there's a finger, thinks Detective C. D. Sloan, a body can't be far behind. It would seem that there are a handful of bodies to whom the finger might belong. There is a suspiciously long list of people gone missing from Great Rooden's farming country: the tippling son of a local pillar of society, a financier who may have angered the wrong man, and even an old tramp or two who may have thieved one too many apples. Can the old tag team of Detective Inspector C. D. Sloan and his sidekick, Constable Crosby, solve the case? show lessTags
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Read three of these in a row. Like most Catherine Airds, good but I can't distinguish one from the next. They're all C.D. Sloane stories, and I can very rarely remember which title goes with which story. But they're always worth reading and re-reading - I just got these three but none of them are new to me, I enjoyed reading them and will keep them for future rereadings. English small-town police procedurals; she has some repeated themes (the Superintendent is a pointy-haired boss; the constable Sloane always gets stuck with is a speed demon with no brain; "Happy Harry of the Traffic Division - he had that name because he had never been known to smile. Harry always insisted that there was nothing in the Traffic Division's work worth a show more smile..." - that line, almost verbatim, is in every single book. But the mysteries are nicely varied, and oddly enough while the recurring characters are mostly cardboard and cliche, the ones involved in any individual mystery - the non-recurring characters - are nicely rounded and interesting. show less
Another clever British mystery from Catherine Aird. "Harm's Way" is part of her continuing series starring CID Detective Inspector C.D. Sloan who plies his trade in the English countryside. This case begins with the discovery of a human finger--dropped by a crow. Now DI Sloan must ferret out the clues to discover: where's the body; who's the body; and how it came to be missing a finger. With his less-than-helpful aide, Detective Constable Crosby, CD weeds through a cast of missing persons and motives galore only to find the crime is for one of the oldest, and most common, reasons.
Aird writes tight and entertaining mysteries with all the droll humor expected from an English author. I do warn readers, though, that if they aren't familiar show more with the 'Queen's English', British mannerisms, and British culture...you may not enjoy "Harm's Way" and CD as much as I do. show less
Aird writes tight and entertaining mysteries with all the droll humor expected from an English author. I do warn readers, though, that if they aren't familiar show more with the 'Queen's English', British mannerisms, and British culture...you may not enjoy "Harm's Way" and CD as much as I do. show less
Interesting plot and twists with engaging characters add to the enjoyment of the story. Clean. Quotes: Biblical verses (not preachy), Bacon, Sherlock, and others. Excellent narration (use faster speech rate if desired). Recommended. 👍 4-⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
The cleverness seemed forced and the story progressed slowly.
Police are called in when a hiker discovers a finger on a country path. After an extensive search, the source of the finger is found.
The finger dropped by a common crow on a woodsy English footpath was most uncommonly missing a body. But a single digit was enough to tell Detective Inspector C.D. Sloan that something was rotten in the county of Calleshire ... something besides the dead man who lay unburied somewhere among the dewy green fields of British farmland. So while search teams scoured the area for the corpus delicti, Sloan went looking for evidence of murder in a county village's most fertile ground - at the local pub. There the slips betwixt cup and lip might provide clues to finding both corpse and killer in Inspector Sloan's most challenging case.
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The Calleshire Chronicles (Sloan and Crosby Canon) by Catherine Aird
25 works; 1 member
Books Read in 2019
4,052 works; 110 members
Books Read in 2018
4,360 works; 110 members
Books Read in 2020
4,379 works; 124 members
Books Read in 2022
5,164 works; 113 members
Books Read in 2023
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Author Information
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- De afgebeten vinger
- Original title
- Harm's Way
- Original publication date
- 1984-12
- People/Characters
- Elsie Bailey (Lowercombe Farm); Luke Michael Bailey; Sam Bailey (Lowercombe Farm); Gordon Briggs (Berebury Country Footpaths Society); William Edward Crosby (Detective Constable); Hector Smithson Dabbe (Doctor) (show all 17); Leonard Hodge; Paul Hucham; Wendy Lamport (Berebury Country Footpaths Society); Superintendent Leeyes; Mrs. Mason; Ted Mason (Edward, Police Constable); George Mellot (Pencombe Farm); Meg Mellot (Pencombe Farm); Mabel Milligan; Andrina Ritchie (Stanestede Farm); Christopher Dennis Sloan (Detective Inspector, C. D., Seedy)
- Important places
- Calleshire, England, UK; Great Rooden, Calleshire, England, UK
- Dedication
- for Gwen Powell
with much gratitude - First words
- "There's no barbed wire," said Wendy Lamport, looking along the hedgerow.
- Quotations
- Neither task appealed to a man of his temperament. One required action and the other thought. Both were anathematical to Constable Mason. His working life had been centered around the skillful ‘referral to higher authority... (show all) of anything involving any effort.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"I should send the Flying Squad if I were you..."
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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- Members
- 188
- Popularity
- 173,274
- Reviews
- 6
- Rating
- (3.93)
- Languages
- Dutch, English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 12
- ASINs
- 5



































































