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The End of My Tether (2002)

by Neil Astley

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552475,276 (2.78)3
Inspector Kernan is investigating the murder of Bernard Tench, a whistleblowing scientist who knew too much about BSE. As Kernan uncovers links between sleaze and slaughter, between pollution and police, his new sidekick Diana Hunter realizes that her eccentric inspector is no ordinary man.
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This novel was a bit too clever for its own good, with so much random banter and wordplay that it was very slowgoing and didn not often make much sense. The underlying story came through anyway, and was good, though a bit too preachy for my taste. The animal rights and environmental threads in this story could have been woven in a bit more artfully and effectively if they were not cast in such a moralizing tone. I did enjoy some of the bits of old English lore, despite their awkward integration with the story, and I liked the complex timeline and metafiction aspects to this book. ( )
  JBarringer | Dec 30, 2017 |
This book has left me in two minds. I loved the way that folklore, sayings and poems were woven into the story, and I liked the twisting and continually surprising plot. Put very simply, the investigation of a murder leads the main characters into a web of deceit, cover-ups and complex relationships. The countryside of Loamshire turns out to be the real victim.

The detail and complexity of the names and characters made me read on - this book certainly excercised the mind! But at times the plot became so convoluted and confusing towards the end of the book, that I was nearly at the end of my tether. Perhaps that was the point. ( )
  boo262 | Sep 15, 2010 |
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Epigraph
A man can be alive in 1860 and in 1830
at the same time. Bodily I may be in 1860,
inert, silent, torpid; but in the spirit I am
walking about in 1828, let us say;- in a
blue dress-coat and brass buttons
- William Makepeace Thackeray

To love is to accept that one might die
another death before one dies one's own
- Marianne Wiggins

In this land of milk and money...
England has been bleeding...
So let's dance for our lives, boys,
in this vaudeville show.
Take your time and take a bow,
this place is gonna blow.
- Thea Gilmore
Dedication
This book is dedicated to the memory of two and a half million cattle needlessly slaughtered in the 1996-1998 Beef War as well as the 120 people so far known to have died from new variant Creutzfeld-Jakob Disease. Written before the outbreak of Foot and Mouth Disease in England in 2001, it is also dedicated to the memory of the six millions sheep, cattle and pigs who lost their lives during that later conflict.
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Peering into the darkness of the garden, Kernan saw that the man was still hanging there, the rope creaking as the wind swung him back and forth.
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Inspector Kernan is investigating the murder of Bernard Tench, a whistleblowing scientist who knew too much about BSE. As Kernan uncovers links between sleaze and slaughter, between pollution and police, his new sidekick Diana Hunter realizes that her eccentric inspector is no ordinary man.

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