So far I have read the first three books in this series:
Death’s Autograph
Ghost Walk
Smoke Screen
London antiquarian bookseller Dido Hoare is a bit different from the usual “cozy” bibliomystery heroine. Sharp, modern, independent, she likes a good drink, a good roll in the hay with the right man (at one that seems right at the moment) and not long into the series finds herself a single mom with a son by her ex-husband (who is killed before the child is born). In addition, she worries about her father Barnabas, a retired academic (and one-time member of Signal Intelligence) with a strong interest in Dido’s business (both personal and professional) who has previously suffered a heart attack but seems no worse for wear.
Dido, of course, consistently refuses to turn mysterious issues over the police and to stay out of obviously dangerous situations. In fact, her involvement in each of these cases seems inescapable at the outset, a refreshing change from contrived mystery plots. While Barnabas expresses dismay at her antics, he often brings his insights, as well as his professional associations, to bear on the cases that Dido falls into.
For backup, there is babysitter Phyllis who takes baby Ben off Dido’s hands when she’s busy getting herself embroiled in yet another misadventure, and Ernie, a burly young black student from Sierra Leone who is a computer whiz, setting up Dido’s catalogs and insisting that she sell books online. (Ernie also cheerfully offers himself as a bodyguard when the occasion calls for some brawn.)
There is, as well, the obligatory book dealer’s cat, Mr. Spock – who so far does little in the series besides providing the opportunity for a joke about naming him because “his ears are pointed.”
Macdonald makes a good effort to understand the ins and outs of used and antiquarian book buying and selling, the peculiarities of book dealers, and the range of interests (and the oddities) of a bookshop’s customers.
Additional books in the series:
Road Kill
Blood Lies
Die Once
Faking it
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2 comments:
For my reading interest, a bibliomystery should include "booklore"--information about books, bookselling, book collecting, etc. This series does this well. The fourth volume was a little slow for me because it had very little of the booklore. I am in the fifth volume, Blood Lies, right now.
Because they are British, they are a little challenging to find, certainly not the sort of thing you find kicking around the library sale or thrift store. I was able to get all eight volumes in a variety of reading copies (one paperback, some x-library) on Amazon for very small sums. Normally I go to the used book databases and look for quality copies of books but I had only heard of this series but wasn't sure if I wanted to collect them the way I do other books. I may go back and get upgrades after reading them.
James Keeline
I've missed these entirely so I'm pleased to see your review. I have The Book Thief on my to-be-read heap and I'm pleased to see you enjoyed it.
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