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The Body on the Beach

The Body on the Beach
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Manufacturer: Berkley
Author: Simon Brett
Publisher: Berkley
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5
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The Body on the Beach Description

Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780425181829
ISBN: 0425181820
Label: Berkley
Manufacturer: Berkley
Number Of Items: 1
Book Pages: 320
Publication Date: 2001-09-01
Publisher: Berkley
Product Release Date: 2001-09-05
Studio: Berkley

Editorial Review of The Body on the Beach


"A pair of sleuths who are winning enough to make the reader invite them back for more....Holmes and Watson with a dash of Laurel and Hardy." (Toronto Star)

"An impressive debut, marked by the usual attention to wit and detail." (Library Journal)

"The characters are wonderful, and their silliness quite engrossing." (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette)

Sensible Carole Seddon doesn't have the tolerance to deal with her new bohemian neighbor, Jude. But Jude doesn't seem so bad when Carole discovers another addition to the neighborhood-a dead body on the beach bearing two wounds on its neck.


Customer Reviews of The Body on the Beach

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Review Summary: Great writing skills
Review: The story is interesting and not overly complicated. I particularly like his writing style: very simple but yet exceedingly accurate in describing personalities and feelings. I think he is a master of word arrangement, just like Ann Granger and Paula Gosling.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Review Summary: A Strong Beginning to a Fine Series
Review: Mix one up-tight newly retired ex-civil servant with a penchant for being reclusive, Carole Seddon, with a devil-may-care new female neighbor with a shadowy past, Jude (no last name), in class conscious Fethering, and you have plenty of room for good fun. Add to those mismatched characters mysterious events . . . and murder, and your plate will soon be overflowing with interesting reading.

Unlike new writers who are often awkward with their first books in a new mystery series, the talented and experienced Simon Brett (author of Mrs. Pargeter and Charles Paris mysteries) is sure-handed from the first word. Here's part of the book's opening paragraph: "Fethering is on the South Coast, not far from Tarring. Though calling itself a village, Fethering isn't what that word immediately brings to the minds of people nostalgic for the idealized, simpler England. Despite the presence of many components of a village -- . . . a whole bunch of people who reckon they're the squire - Fethering is in fact quite a large residential conurbation."

This book presents great challenges event to a seasoned pro. Carole and Jude are amateur detectives and avoid involvement with the police. They have to get people to talk to them, reveal secrets, and track down clues on their own. It's difficult to do without creating serious mistakes in the plot. At the same time, this book requires a lot of character development. Mr. Brett pulls it off while making it all look ridiculously easy.

Here's the story's beginning. Carole likes to walk her dog (one of the few activities she has other than cleaning her spotless house) for exercise. One morning, she heads for the beach and is disturbed while someone races past her without the customary village nod. Soon thereafter, Carole finds a dead body. But Carole's not easily flustered. She heads home, washes her dog, cleans the house, and eventually calls the police about the body some time later before the tide comes in again. They investigate and find no body. Carole feels pretty silly. Soon thereafter, Carole bumps into her new neighbor Jude, a little before she had planned to meet her. When Jude believes Carole about the body and suggests they do something, Carole is delighted . . . even though she isn't exactly sure that Jude is someone she wants to spend too much time with.

The story is filled with such delightful class-conscious set-ups. Fethering seems to have been occupied with more than its share of people who think they are the squire.

The mysteries deepen as other strange occurrences follow. What does it all mean? Mr. Brett does a fine job of making sense of out what seems pretty far-fetched . . . so stick around to the end.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Review Summary: Oh Happy Days
Review: This is the first of two vols in Brett's latest series. It is a typical(?) Briddish mystery, with much toing and froing. The main character may seem a bit dry, but by the end of the story she has loosened up quite a bit. Such as going to a pub! I expect that there will be an expansion of her character with perhaps a bit of, dare I say it, romance? Anyhoo, Brett is off to a good start with this one and the second book is on the shelves. Treat yourself to seaside England....tides, rain and some snooty people doing their thing. Enjoy, and aloha...

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Review Summary: The Jude and Carole Show . . . .
Review: Simon Brett is a very good writer, and I enjoyed the logical flow of the story. The reader can clearly understand the mood and scene of each situation. His two amateur sleuths, Jude and Carole are complete opposites in character, but develop a friendship and a quirky ability to jointly solve a murder. Why only 3 stars? Some parts of the story just seemed a little dry - I was expecting a little more wit and lighthearted conversation between characters. Also, Carole just wasn't that interesting - granted, she is a character that is suppose to have a pretty uninspiring look on life, but it's a little too uninspiring.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Review Summary: A body on the beach you'll be glad you stumbled over.
Review: Simon Brett is one of the most skilled and satisfying practitioners in the detective fiction field. All I ask of such writers he provides: interesting amateur sleuths, shrewd characterisation, fluent but stylish prose, some gentle thrills at the end, and an opportunity to "escape" to somewhere I am happy to be for six or seven hours.

In this novel, he introduces a pair of new sleuths: Carole and Jude. He also introduces a new locale: a coastal resort on the south coast of England, near Worthing. It is called Fethering, and it is fully described in the first chapter.

Simon Brett not only writes, but he also reads his works, using a narrator's voice that resembles that of the current British Prime Minister, Tony Blair, while also providing convincing and distinguishable portrayals for all his cast of characters.

A body on the beach you'll be glad you stumbled over.



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