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Detective Inspector Bill Slider has always been keen on architecture - what Atherton calls his edifice complex - and The Old Rectory is the kind of house he would give anything to own. But the dead body of Jennifer Andrews, found in a hole dug by her builder husband Eddie, rather spoils the view from the terrace. It looks a straightforward enough case but as the investigation proceeds, Slider finds, frustratingly, that nothing makes sense, and that - as in his own marriage - there is far show more more going on than meets the eye. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
An author who relishes words and uses them both soundly and amusingly and without intruding on the story is an increasingly rare find. My liking of the Bill Slider mysteries is 90% about the often whimsical turn of phrase; I bet friends of Cynthia Harrod-Eagles envy her readiness with the witty pun.
The other 10% of my enjoyment of these books is that Harrod-Eagles has created a rarity in crime-fiction - a detective who does not fold softly into stereotypical obscurity, or have any outstandingly obvious reasons why he shouldn't. Slider reads like an ordinary, dogged bloke who has a job to do, and who is given to flashes of insight, often brought about by sheer accumulation of information. His home life and troubles are painted in enough show more detail to matter, instead of becoming a background murmur of stock hero-woes. His partner, too, is not blatantly side-kick material - slightly swifter than Slider, though a little less wise, and a little less dull on hungover mornings. The plots move steadily, the mysteries are sound, and the peripheral characters not glossed over.
This book, like all of the Bill Slider mysteries, is outstanding on its own, without aid of astonishing contrived endings, or characters with momentous issues. A crime fiction novel to be genuinely liked and which takes it's place happily beside its preceding tales. show less
The other 10% of my enjoyment of these books is that Harrod-Eagles has created a rarity in crime-fiction - a detective who does not fold softly into stereotypical obscurity, or have any outstandingly obvious reasons why he shouldn't. Slider reads like an ordinary, dogged bloke who has a job to do, and who is given to flashes of insight, often brought about by sheer accumulation of information. His home life and troubles are painted in enough show more detail to matter, instead of becoming a background murmur of stock hero-woes. His partner, too, is not blatantly side-kick material - slightly swifter than Slider, though a little less wise, and a little less dull on hungover mornings. The plots move steadily, the mysteries are sound, and the peripheral characters not glossed over.
This book, like all of the Bill Slider mysteries, is outstanding on its own, without aid of astonishing contrived endings, or characters with momentous issues. A crime fiction novel to be genuinely liked and which takes it's place happily beside its preceding tales. show less
I'm deducting the half star for the suggestion at the very end that there might not be enough evidence to charge the murderer - it seemed to me that there was plenty.
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Author Information

120+ Works 5,787 Members
Cynthia Harrod-Eagles was born in London in 1948. She attended the University of Edinburgh and University College London, where she studied English, history and philosophy. She wrote her first novel while in college and won the Young Writers' Award for The Waiting Game in 1972, but did not become a full-time writer until 1979 with the start of the show more Morland Dynasty series. In 1993, she won the RNA Novel of the Year Award for Emily, the third volume of the Kirov Trilogy. She also writes the Bill Slider Mystery series and under the pen names Elizabeth Bennett and Emma Woodhouse. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series

Bill Slider (7)
Work Relationships
Is contained in
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Shallow Grave
- Original publication date
- 1998
- People/Characters
- Bill Slider
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 96
- Popularity
- 333,908
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.59)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 7
- ASINs
- 3


























































