The Moor (Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes #4)
This could have done with a lot less slogging through the wet moors to question the populace, and fewer tedious details about the life and writings of Holmes' & Russell's host. It could also have done with less indulgence in nostalgia for the Hound of the Baskervilles. Although some of that was to be expected, more current-day spectral activity rather than just being told about rumors would have added a needed layer of suspense and Gothic creepiness. As it was, I mainly got the discomfort of
I ran out of books on my vacation and someone lent me this to read. I was definitely into the book. I thought the play on the well known Holmes and his relationship with his wife was intriguing. Mary Russell is a strong female character but at times seemed to fall into the submissive role. This made her more believable to me as a human. The disappointment in this book was the ending. It seemed as if there was a huge climatic build up but that was not to be. Instead there was a confusing and
Mary Russell joins her husband Sherlock Holmes to investigate more strange sightings on the Dartmoor moors.Number Four in the series.Firstly, there is not much of a mystery. I'd worked it out long before the dynamic duo did. There is little in the way of atmosphere or suspense. In fact, the author seems to go out of her way to make this as unlike 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' as she can. Indeed, if readers are expecting a sequel, they will be disappointed.Secondly, Mary Russell. Her sneering
Not the best of the bunch, it was just ok. I see now some even say to skip this one. Mary is summoned by Sherlock to the moor at Dartmoor, the location of The Hound of the Baskervilles. She doesn't want to go, reluctantly stays, and proceeds to walk the moor, get muddy and wet, has some tea, and takes a bath... repeatedly. Meh. The mystery seemed sound, but went nowhere, and finished with a thrown together, partial resolution.
(See my review for book 3, A Letter of Mary....the thoughts below pick up where it leaves off)...Along the same lines, one thing that surprises me in this book is that Russell complains that the Rev. Sabine Baring-Gould's treatment of theology is haphazard--yet doesn't seem to realize that he's not merely evaluating theology, he's doing it. (Which means that as a scholar herself she needs to be evaluating what he's doing on its own terms.) Again--deliberate on King's part, or a flaw in her
Laurie R. King
Mass Market Paperback | Pages: 320 pages Rating: 3.95 | 14826 Users | 948 Reviews
Mention Epithetical Books The Moor (Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes #4)
Title | : | The Moor (Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes #4) |
Author | : | Laurie R. King |
Book Format | : | Mass Market Paperback |
Book Edition | : | First Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 320 pages |
Published | : | (first published 1998) |
Categories | : | Mystery. Historical. Historical Fiction. Fiction. Historical Mystery |
Chronicle During Books The Moor (Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes #4)
In the eerie wasteland of Dartmoor, Sherlock Holmes summons his devoted wife and partner, Mary Russell, from her studies at Oxford to aid the investigation of a death and some disturbing phenomena of a decidedly supernatural origin. Through the mists of the moor there have been sightings of a spectral coach made of bones carrying a woman long-ago accused of murdering her husband--and of a hound with a single glowing eye. Returning to the scene of one of his most celebrated cases, The Hound of the Baskervilles, Holmes and Russell investigate a mystery darker and more unforgiving than the moors themselves.Define Books As The Moor (Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes #4)
Original Title: | The Moor : A Novel of Suspense Featuring Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes |
ISBN: | 0006510868 (ISBN13: 9780006510864) |
Edition Language: | English URL http://www.laurierking.com/?page_id=1209 |
Series: | Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes #4 |
Characters: | Mary Russell, Sabine Baring-Gould, Sherlock Holmes (Russell & Holmes series) |
Setting: | United Kingdom |
Rating Epithetical Books The Moor (Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes #4)
Ratings: 3.95 From 14826 Users | 948 ReviewsNotice Epithetical Books The Moor (Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes #4)
This was by far the worst book of the Marry Russel series. King started off with such a great idea, discovering the reasons behind several legitimate sightings of a spectral coach carrying a cursed woman and her devilish dog on a dark moor. However the execution was tedious. King simply has a difficult time staying on topic with this book. She wrote so much on the geography of the land that the actual mystery itself seemed only to be a side plot in her summation of the landscape. There was veryThis could have done with a lot less slogging through the wet moors to question the populace, and fewer tedious details about the life and writings of Holmes' & Russell's host. It could also have done with less indulgence in nostalgia for the Hound of the Baskervilles. Although some of that was to be expected, more current-day spectral activity rather than just being told about rumors would have added a needed layer of suspense and Gothic creepiness. As it was, I mainly got the discomfort of
I ran out of books on my vacation and someone lent me this to read. I was definitely into the book. I thought the play on the well known Holmes and his relationship with his wife was intriguing. Mary Russell is a strong female character but at times seemed to fall into the submissive role. This made her more believable to me as a human. The disappointment in this book was the ending. It seemed as if there was a huge climatic build up but that was not to be. Instead there was a confusing and
Mary Russell joins her husband Sherlock Holmes to investigate more strange sightings on the Dartmoor moors.Number Four in the series.Firstly, there is not much of a mystery. I'd worked it out long before the dynamic duo did. There is little in the way of atmosphere or suspense. In fact, the author seems to go out of her way to make this as unlike 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' as she can. Indeed, if readers are expecting a sequel, they will be disappointed.Secondly, Mary Russell. Her sneering
Not the best of the bunch, it was just ok. I see now some even say to skip this one. Mary is summoned by Sherlock to the moor at Dartmoor, the location of The Hound of the Baskervilles. She doesn't want to go, reluctantly stays, and proceeds to walk the moor, get muddy and wet, has some tea, and takes a bath... repeatedly. Meh. The mystery seemed sound, but went nowhere, and finished with a thrown together, partial resolution.
(See my review for book 3, A Letter of Mary....the thoughts below pick up where it leaves off)...Along the same lines, one thing that surprises me in this book is that Russell complains that the Rev. Sabine Baring-Gould's treatment of theology is haphazard--yet doesn't seem to realize that he's not merely evaluating theology, he's doing it. (Which means that as a scholar herself she needs to be evaluating what he's doing on its own terms.) Again--deliberate on King's part, or a flaw in her
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