Sunday, June 14, 2020

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Original Title: A Man Lay Dead
ISBN: 0006512518 (ISBN13: 9780006512516)
Edition Language: English
Series: Roderick Alleyn #1
Characters: Roderick Alleyn, Nigel Bathgate, Sir Hubert Handesley, Charles Rankin, Arthur Wilde, Angela North, Marjorie Wilde, Rosamund Grant, Doctor Foma Tokareff, Vassily Ivanovitch, Mr. Sumiloff, Detective-Sergeant Bailey
Setting: Frantock Hall(United Kingdom) London, England(United Kingdom)
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A Man Lay Dead (Roderick Alleyn #1) Paperback | Pages: 176 pages
Rating: 3.81 | 10698 Users | 617 Reviews

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Title:A Man Lay Dead (Roderick Alleyn #1)
Author:Ngaio Marsh
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 176 pages
Published:2000 by HarperCollins (first published 1934)
Categories:Mystery. Fiction. Crime. Detective. Classics. European Literature. British Literature. Thriller. Mystery Thriller

Relation As Books A Man Lay Dead (Roderick Alleyn #1)

At Sir Hubert Handesley's country house party, five guests have gathered for the uproarious parlor game of "Murder." Yet no one is laughing when the lights come up on an actual corpse, the good-looking and mysterious Charles Rankin. Scotland Yard's Inspector Roderick Alleyn arrives to find a complete collection of alibis, a missing butler, and an intricate puzzle of betrayal and sedition in the search for the key player in this deadly game.

Rating Of Books A Man Lay Dead (Roderick Alleyn #1)
Ratings: 3.81 From 10698 Users | 617 Reviews

Comment On Of Books A Man Lay Dead (Roderick Alleyn #1)
2.5 ★& that high only because this was Marsh's first book. Makes you realise what a remarkable achievement Christie's first , was.Other reviewers have criticised Marsh for inconsistencies in Alleyn's characterisation. I actually don't mind this. I prefer it to having Alleyn & various aristocrats angsting over being involved in something as low bred as a murder! This is very tedious in Marsh's other novels. And I did enjoy the start- although for some strange reason, the frenetic pace

BOTTOM LINE: Thoroughly old-fashioned "good read!", with an aristo-detective, all the suspects gathered in A Great House for a weekend house party, a peculiar murder method, wild Bolsheviks complicating everything, family intrigues galore, an affable-but-dim Watson - what's not to like? First mystery novel (1934) from a now-classic author isn't challenging, brilliant, or particularly special, but is still entertaining, giving a hint of her good books yet to come and, as is usual with Marsh,

A reread of an old favorite. Ngaio Marsh's first novel, this story takes place in an English country house where a parlor game of "Murder" results in a real murder committed with a real dagger. Chief Detective Inspector Roderick Alleyn comes to the rescue and eventually figures out whodunit. In this cast of well-drawn characters, my favorite was the naive young journalist Nigel Bathgate, who, at 25, "had outgrown that horror of enthusiasm which is so characteristic of youth-grown-up." I love



As Ngaio Marsh's fledgling flight into the world of detective novels, this book had enough in it to pique my interest and leave the door open for more of her works. Although it lacks the mellifluous flow of Dame Agatha, in style, in writing, and in ideas, I found it still filled the gap for that "country-house cosy" that I was looking for.There is a bit of a gimmicky feel to it overall as if Marsh is trying to capture Christie's style, and not quite succeeding, especially in Inspector Alleyn's

Marsh introduced her famous detective in this mystery, and you can tell that she wasn't entirely sure what personality to go with. At times he reads like Wimsey playing a silly ass, at other times he is crude or clever in the manner of a Bright Young Thing; he takes the official police hard-line one moment only to suddenly behave in unprofessional and even inappropriate ways. I suspect she was trying to write realistically complex character, but the overall effect is one of schizophrenia and

Now I am way behind with my Ngaio Marsh challenge , not because I was delaying reading these books, but for other book reasons. So when I started reading this book I was hoping I would enjoy it, and I did. I have seen a few TV episodes with Patrick Malahide, but had no pre-conceived ideas of Chief Inspector Alleyn, that said, I must admit he did come across very Patrick Malahide -ish.My previous book was another detective story Pietr the Latvian and it was to me a fantastic, albeit short

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