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Careless in Red LP: A Novel (Thomas Lynley and Barbara Havers Novels) | 
| Author: Elizabeth George Publisher: HarperLuxe Category: Book
List Price: $27.95 Buy New: $18.45 You Save: $9.50 (34%)
Rating: 134 reviews Sales Rank: 277039
Format: Large Print Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 1024 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.7 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 2.2
ISBN: 0061562785 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780061562785
Publication Date: May 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description
In her most eagerly anticipated novel yet, Elizabeth George brings back Scotland Yard's Thomas Lynley to investigate a ruthless crime. After the senseless murder of his wife, Detective Superintendent Thomas Lynley retreated to Cornwall, where he has spent six solitary weeks hiking the bleak and rugged coastline. But no matter how far he walks, no matter how exhausting his days, the painful memories of Helen's death do not diminish. On the forty-third day of his walk, at the base of a cliff, Lynley discovers the body of a young man who appears to have fallen to his death. The closest town, better known for its tourists and its surfing than its intrigue, seems an unlikely place for murder. However, it soon becomes apparent that a clever killer is indeed at work, and this time Lynley is not a detective but a witness and possibly a suspect. The head of the vastly understaffed local police department needs Lynley's help, though, especially when it comes to the mysterious, secretive woman whose cottage lies not far from where the body was discovered. But can Lynley let go of the past long enough to solve a most devious and carefully planned crime?
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| Customer Reviews: Read 129 more reviews...
Intense, disturbing thriller proves that Elizabeth George is back May 11, 2008 196 out of 211 found this review helpful
After my disappointment with Elizabeth George's previous two novels, I was a bit concerned when the next book in this ongoing series, Careless in Red was announced. But in having gamely read her series, and knowing that sometimes an author will go off on a tangent, I decided to give this one a chance. If it failed, well, I could always go back to the earlier novels of the series, and leave it at that.
Thomas Lynley, aristocrat and Scotland Yard detective, has retreated to the wilds of the Cornish coast to cope with the loss of his beloved wife and unborn child. He has deliberately cut himself off from everyone he knows, heading off to a future that even he can't comprehend. But the real world is about to intrude and shatter his illusions.
A rock climber has fallen to his death in a remote cove, and unfortunately for Lynley, he's the one who discovers the body. Almost at the same time, the owner of the nearby cottage, Daidre Trahair, returns as he is breaking into her home, and together they report the death. The downside to all of this is that it presents both of them as potential subjects.
For Santo Kerne has been murdered, and as with a good thriller, there's plenty of potential criminals here. Santo was an energetic young surfer, mad for women, and still able to exercise a great deal of charm -- enough to where it's just odd that anyone would kill him.
And the local police chief, DI Bea Hannaford, has plenty of problems of her own. From an ex-husband who is also a police officer, to a teenage son that fill of fire and rebellion, and an assistant who makes mere incompetence look good -- she's not a happy woman. Especially when she finds out who Lynley is.
The victim's family are also not much of a treat either. They've been renovating a dinosaur of an Edwardian hotel, seeking to lure the tourists with promising adventures in the wild splendours of Cornwall, but money is tight, and when Ben Kerne's wife, Dellen, is less than stable, it threatens to bring back a lot of family secrets.
Especially when it seems that Ben Kerne was involved in a very similar death some decades earlier...
I have to say, Elizabeth George is back with this novel. There's plenty of details, an ingeneous use of the colour red, and the fraught relationships here are stretched so tight that they hum with tension. Which is a real plus. Right up to the final pages, the story keeps at a very tight pace, and I found myself reading well into the night, wanting to know just what happens next.
Fans of Barbara Havers may be disappointed that she doesn't appear until partway through the novel, but she is always a treat to watch in action, and she doesn't miss a beat in this one. Especially when she is working with Bea Hannaford, the two of them in a wicked variation of good cop/bad cop.
The exotic names and locals of the Cornish countryside add a very rich flavour to the story. Another plus are the use of sports such as surfing and rock climbing. It's an England that we're familiar with, but not quite.
But naturally, where Ms. George excells is in the internal worlds of her characters. This time, the one that really takes center stage is Thomas Lynley himself. Mentally fragile, adrift, the reader is treated to a very new and fresh look at a character that has appeared in previous novels as someone clever and forthright, seemingly unable to break. It works here, and works well. The relationship that he develops with Daidre is fascinating to watch, and we get to see just how human he is under the cool exterior of a posh swell.
I was really taken by surprise by this one. The story was tightly written and compelling, with the author plotting and drawing the reader into this story of families and communities tied together by secrets and old conflicts. The theme of family ties and the tenuous and rather tricky love between fathers and sons are explored. What I did like was that George is not at all shy about looking at the uglier side of human emotions and motivations, and she uses them to great effect to create this moody thriller.
Happily recommended, and a must-read for any fans of the series. Four and a half stars rounded up to five.
penned in purple May 18, 2008 69 out of 83 found this review helpful
One of the earlier reviewers suggests that this novel is over-written, with passages meant, perhaps, to be poetic, but seeming instead over-literary. While I agree, I'd suggest another phrase.
Bad. The writing is bad. It's what college comp teachers used to call Purple Prose.
Elizabeth George is a writer I've always admired. Her prose is generally intelligent, literate, and vivid. Either she's now trying to win a Booker Prize (give it up, honey, you're an American) or her laptop has acquired a dire virus, because this book oozes with infelicitous constructions. An ugly grocery store is "sprawled like a nasty thought" at a crossroads; a pathologist is "thin as an ageing spinster's marital hopes;" a girl's collarbones protrude "like the excrescent evidence of dutch elm disease on the bark of a tree." (_What?_)
Please. This prose is trying too hard.
While these phrases certainly leap off the page, they don't do anything to advance the plot or theme or to provide fresh mental images - indeed, some don't even scan, so to speak -- and good prose shouldn't call such raucous attention to itself.
Then there are the names. No one doubts that Ms George does her homework on settings. Indeed, some of her books have sunk under the sheer weight of geographic and historic detail. Here she adds hard-to-remember names to the mix, lest we miss that everyone is in Cornwall. There's Selevan Penrule, Cadan Angarrack, Daidre Trahair, Ione Soutar, Benesek, Santo, and Dellan Kerne, and Aladara Pappos, a Greek, thrown in for good measure. George would, of course, scorn giving us a Greek named Maria or Daphne. (As a passing thought, I pray that the series never takes Ms George to Wales.) Here, I virtually wept with relief at the local DI's name: Beatrice Hannaford. I did, however, like the parrot named Pooh -- until I learned it was for excrement, not Winnie.
Elizabeth George specializes in miserable families. Since all her readers know that, it's probably unfair to complain, but the misery here is virtually unrelieved. The theme of fathers failing to know their children is older than the Lear plot, but that doesn't make it any the less depressing. We don't hear Barbara Havers' voice until page 227, and she doesn't appear for another eighty pages. I'm a Havers fan, and she's barely present. Sadly, this long-awaited novel reminds me of A Place of Hiding, my least-favorite entry in the series.
Death In Cornwall May 7, 2008 58 out of 68 found this review helpful
Lynley's back! If this news thrills you, then you've already discovered the wonderful novels of Elizabeth George. If you haven't yet encountered the titled Englishman/police detective and his marvelous colleague, Barbara Havers, it's high time you did.
Mourning the recent loss of his wife, Lynley is hiking the shorelines of his home county, Cornwall, when he discovers the body of a young man at the base of a cliff. Accident or murder? The local police chief sees Lynley as a witness--and possibly a suspect. To help the police (and clear his own name), he lingers in the seaside town, meeting a vivid gallery of people with various connections to the victim. The grieving Lynley's reluctant entry into the investigation might just be his ticket back to the world of the living.
As ever, George's mystery is solid, her characters are brilliantly complex, and her writing style is as elegant as it is eloquent. This series is sheer pleasure, and CARELESS IN RED is an excellent new addition to it. Highly recommended.
Unhappy families May 10, 2008 51 out of 56 found this review helpful
Detective Superintendent Thomas Lynley has suffered a huge personal loss, and is walking the rugged cliffs of Cornwall to come to terms with it. "Careless in Red" is not only the story of his struggle with grief, it is the story of several families and their similar struggles, with a focus on the understandable (but vain) effort of parents to control the lives of their children.
In the course of his walk, Lynley finds the body of young Santo Kerne at the bottom of the cliff he had been climbing, and as the investigation of the death develops, the superintendent is drawn into it at the behest of local police Detective Inspector Bea Hannaford, who is having family problems of her own. DS Barbara Havers makes an appearance--and a somewhat unusual partner for DI Hannaford.
Cornwall and its surfing world are well handled in this new Lynley novel. (One minor complaint is that some terms of climbing are not explained.) While not all the characters are believable (voluptuous Dellen Kerne and her son Santo are among those who test that limit), most are fully rounded and lifelike; and several are very amusing. (I really savored DI Hannaford and company.) Some of the descriptive passages and dialogues are overwritten--meant, I think, to be poetic, but seeming instead over-literary. The resolution of the murder is not particularly satisfying, not because of the identity of the murderer, but because of the final mechanics of the solution.
I found the novel very enjoyable, and if you are a Lynley and Havers fan, I think you will too. The complications of parenthood are nicely explored, and the bittersweet consequences of love and loss, Lynley's and others, will draw you in.
Another disappointment--who cares about these people May 12, 2008 34 out of 51 found this review helpful
I have been a fan of Elizabeth George for years in spite of some annoying elements--the mix-and-match interpersonal relationships of the core characters, the continual whining of Deborah (get a grip, girl); the fact that Barbara doesn't seem to be able to get into Marks and Spencer and buy a couple of tolerable outfits after all these years; people NEVER being able to open their mouths and say what they think; the overdone British slang in every sentence (please, no more "sorting"); and, oh yes, the incredibly irritating "With No One As a Witness." In spite of the last two books--I refused to buy "What Came Before He Shot Her"--I looked forward to this book. I am very sorry to say that it was a great disappointment. I really didn't give a damn about most of the new characters and their stupid relationships. What a tedious group of people! What bores most of them are! I don't care who they have sex with or who killed Santo. (What an odd bunch of names these characters have. I assume the names are supposed to be Cornish, but they seemed more like Star Wars to me and odd for the sake of odd.) It is always a disaster when authors become so successful that no one will tell them when a book doesn't really work before it is published. For me, this book didn't work.
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