Author:Georgette Heyer
If you love Bridgerton, you'll love Georgette Heyer!
'The greatest writer who ever lived' Antonia Fraser
'[My] generation's Julia Quinn' Adjoa Andoh, star of Bridgerton
'One of my perennial comfort authors. Heyer's books are as incisively witty and quietly subversive as any of Jane Austen's' Joanne Harris
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Sparkling characterisation and inventive plot from one of the best known and beloved detective novelists of all time.
The death of Adam Penhallow on the eve of his birthday seems, at first, to be by natural causes. He was elderly after all. But Penhallow wasn't well liked. He had ruled over his estate with an iron will and a sharp tongue. He had played one relative off against another. He was so bad tempered and mean that both his servants and his family hated him.
It soon transpires that far from being a peaceful death, Penhallow was, in fact, murdered. Poisoned. With his family gathered to celebrate his birthday, and servants that both feared and despised him, there are more than a dozen prime suspects. But which one of them turned hatred into murder?
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Readers love Penhallow . . .
***** 'Full of fascinating characters and plenty of vivid description - this one surprised me and actually made me cry!'
***** 'Penhallow is one of my favourite Georgette Heyer novels.'
***** 'A real tour-de-force.'
***** 'Pure genius!'
***** 'Second read, another 5 stars. An original and highly suspenseful mystery, nothing like anything else I have ever read.'
'We had better start ranking Heyer alongside such incomparable whodunit authors as Christie, Marsh, Tey and Allingham'
—— San Francisco Chronicle'Rarely have we seen humour and mystery so perfectly blended'
—— New York Times'Sharp, clear and witty'
—— The New Yorker'Heyer's characters and dialogue are an abiding delight to me ... I have seldom met people to whom I have taken so violent a fancy from the word "Go"'
—— Dorothy L. Sayers'The wittiest of detective writers'
—— Daily MailNesbo, in his fifth, most wide-ranging novel, gradually tightens the narrative grip until, throughout the last 100 pages, the reader also finds it hard to breathe
—— Mark Sanderson , Evening StandardMany authors know how to make the hairs on the back of your neck stand up. Jo Nesbo's one of the few who keeps them there
Inventive and extremely creepy
—— Daily MailA strong, pacey narrative with plenty of gruesome discoveries
—— Laura Wilson , The GuardianThe Snowman is a superb thriller. Jo Nesbo is astonishingly good; he knows how to grab you, by the throat and by the heart
Jo Nesbo conjures up such a gripping sense of terror in The Snowman that his tale of a perverted serial killer with a penchant for the titular figures leaves your wits scrambled
—— Siobhan Murphy , MetroChillingly adept...creepy, creepy stuff from the very first page
—— Time OutNesbo handles the tension with aplomb
—— MetroNesbo's plotting and pared-back prose style effectively keeps the reader hooked as he ramps up the action to a gripping climax
—— Big IssueHole is all a fictional detective should be...each scene is succinct, dovetails with another, shifts the reader's perspective, and keeps the pace fast and interesting...he ensures his readers keep turning the page to read more
—— Times Literary SupplementNorwegian crime novel that's as gripping as The Silence of the Lambs
—— The Sunday TimesThe quality of the writing (and its translation) is so impressive
—— Literary ReviewNesbo is shaping up to be the next big name in Scandinavian crime fiction... With its tensile-steel narrative grip, this most ambitious of Nesbo's crime novels banishes any fears that the omniscient serial killer scenario has been exhausted
—— Barry Forshaw , IndependentWith Henning Mankell having written his last Wallander novel and Stieg Larsson no longer with us, I have had to make the decision, to my own satisfaction, on whom to confer the title of best current Nordic writer of crime fiction. After finishing Jo Nesbo's The Snowman, I hesitate no longer. The Norwegian wins... This is crime writing of the highest order, in which the characters are as strong as the story, where an atmosphere of evil permeates, and the tension never lets up
—— Marcel Berlins , The TimesThere is no doubt in my mind that The Snowman is the best so far of Jo Nesbø's series about Inspector Harry Hole of the Oslo police... The Snowman is a complex, intellectually satisfying plot with many twists and turns... Do yourself a favour and read it
—— EurocrimeAn ingenious, bizarre and exceptional serial-killer investigation...as riveting as The Silence of the Lambs
—— Sunday Times Summer ReadingReaders wondering where to turn after finishing Stieg Larsson's Millennium trilogy would be well advised to give Jo Nesbo a try. His Oslo-set thrillers about troubled detective Harry Hole feature a similar mix of icebound settings, relentless action, sexual violence and social comment
—— John Williams , GuardianMy crime fiction book of the year so far
—— Marcel Berlins , Sunday TimesA must-read for Stieg Larsson fans, this pacey crime thriller blends enthralling storytelling with an insightful take on controversial issues
—— GraziaNesbo effortlessly shows what can be done with the classic detective story, employing clever tricks to maintain almost unbearable suspense
—— Joan Smith , Sunday Times, Christmas round upConsolidated his reputation as a Scandinavian novelist ready to fill any Larsson-shaped holes. Nesbo, one ex-rock star who can write, fuses urgent storytelling with a keen engagement with social issues
—— Barry Forshaw , Independent, Christmas round upA superb, tasty, huge page-turner... Seriously scary but a superior thriller
—— Vince Cable , Evening Standard, Christmas round upMy big book discovery this time was The Snowman by Jo Nesbo - it's about a Norwegian detective who has to investigate a series of gruesome murders. What could be better for holiday entertainment
—— Bruno Tonioli , Mail on SundayTHE NEXT STIEG LARSSON
—— Independent[A] dark, chilling, page-turner
—— Deborah D. Rogers , Times Higher Education, *Summer Reads of 2021*