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Duplicate Death
Duplicate Death
Oct 12, 2024 12:30 AM

Author:Georgette Heyer,Matt Addis

Duplicate Death

Brought to you by Penguin.

Double the murder means double the stakes in Georgette Heyer's classic crime story.

Inspector Hemingway has his work cut out for him when a seemingly civilized card game ends in a double murder.

The two crimes appear identical, but were they carried out by the same hand?

When Timothy Harte's young fiancé - a put-upon secretary and suspected gold digger - becomes the inspector's prime suspect, Harte is determined to prove her innocence.

But when he starts digging into her past, he finds it's more than a little bit shady...

'A fabulous, witty writer'

Stephen Fry

'Georgette Heyer is second to none'

Sunday Times

'A writer of great style'

The Telegraph

'Heyer's characters and dialogue are a delight'

Dorothy L. Sayers

© Georgette Heyer 1951 (P) Penguin Audio 2021

Reviews

'Rarely have we seen humour and mystery so perfectly blended'

—— New York Times

'Sharp, clear and witty'

—— The New Yorker

'The wittiest of detective writers'

—— Daily Mail

Nothing will ever match the Cold War spy novels written in his prime, but his later work illuminates themes of loyalty, betrayal and conflicting values in a modern context

—— Vince Cable , New Statesman, Books of the Year

A superb example of le Carré's enduring and exquisite genius

—— Daily Mail, Books of the Year

Gripping and involving, an elegant farewell by a much missed writer

—— Siân Phillips , Daily Express, Books of the Year

Silverview has many of le Carré's characteristic virtues . . . engaging characters and three or four splendid set scenes in which veteran spooks stir the embers of old fires

—— Scotsman, Best Books of the Year

Silverview is a cat-and-mouse chase from an East Anglian seaside town to the Eastern Bloc. Published ten months after he passed away, it marks a fitting final work by the master of spy fiction

—— Irish Times, Books of the Year

A taut, thrilling spy novel. Read it as a tribute to a master

—— Stella, Books of the Year

Silverview has all the old magic . . . it offers a rewarding post-script to the long-distance spell-binders The Little Drummer Girl and Absolute Friends

—— David Bromwich , Times Literary Supplement, Books of The Year

His publisher is promoting it as a great literary event - the final book by one of postwar Britain's finest writers. That seems fair enough to me . . . [Silverview has] enough reminders of the old magic to please his most ardent aficionados

—— Dominic Sandbrook , Sunday Times

Le Carré at his finest, revealing character and backstory through dialogue with an economy and grace beyond most writers . . . le Carré's greatness has its roots in his mastery of spy fiction; a genre he augmented with novels notable for their craftsmanship and humanity, and writing for its stealth and sophistication. With the publication of Silverview, it's clear these virtues remained intact to the end

—— Mick Herron , Guardian

Thematically, this is classic le Carré: an exploration of how people do the wrong thing for the right motive. The prose is as unshowily superb as ever

—— Sunday Telegraph

A fitting coda to the work of our greatest spy novelist

—— John Williams , Mail on Sunday

It is written with elegance and often pungency, the pitch-perfect dialogue ranging from the waggishly epigrammatic to the bluntly outraged

—— New York Times

Le Carré's ability to inhabit the deepest recesses of his characters' lives is once again on sparkling display . . . It leaves no doubt that le Carré believed good literature could help make the world a better place. His own contribution to that edifice was by no means negligible

—— FT

Textbook le Carré and a pleasing coda to a brilliant career: a short, sharp study of the human cost of espionage

—— Daily Telegraph

The first page hooks you in . . . John le Carré has lost none of his power to draw the reader straight into his world

—— The Times

There is a retro charm about proceedings . . . as well as a welcome array of familiar le Carré tropes, from sharply drawn characters to stimulating interviews and debriefings, plus a compelling denouement involving a wanted man on the run . . . a worthy coda, a commanding farewell from a much-missed master

—— Economist

Arguably the greatest English novelist of his generation

—— Guardian

Crisp prose, a precision-tooled plot, the heady sense of an inside track on a shadowy world . . . all his usual pleasures are here

—— Observer

A lyrical, poignant portrait of betrayal in a family that lives in a world submerged in subterfuge, and resonates with le Carré's exquisite genius. It is to be savoured gently rather than devoured

—— Daily Mail

A diverting if slender coda to one of the boldest writing careers of the 20th century . . . In this posthumous farewell, le Carré is still showing us how literary fiction and the spy narrative can coexist in the same book

—— i

A poignant story of love and loyalty

—— Independent

A fitting conclusion to the long career of a writer who redefined an entire genre with the deceptive easy of pure genius . . . Silverview is filled with joy in the resilience of the human spirit, and with love . . . It's also deeply thrilling, in the best way

—— Irish Times

Packed with cherishable details and intriguingly ambivalent about the role of the Secret Intelligence Service, John le Carré's last novel brings his career to a close in fine style

—— Scotsman

A very fine finale . . . for writing of subtlety, cadence and strength, with a special aptitude for the revealing particular, [le Carré] is virtually unequalled . . . Time and again, le Carré was able to weave an entrancing, haunting world of his own, a feat repeated in Silverview. There are few writers to match him, and fewer who are still alive

—— Spectator

In his trademark lucid prose, le Carré sets the scene for an atmospheric tale of betrayal, deceit and secret service malpractice . . . John le Carré, one of the great analysts of the contemporary scene, has left us a minor masterpiece of secrets and lies in spy land

—— Evening Standard

A winner with fans of the master spy-writer

—— Oldie

A piercing portrait of moral ambivalence

—— i

It is classic le Carré . . . If this is the quality le Carré was producing in the last years of his life, we can be certain there are further posthumous delights coming our way

—— Herald

I gobbled up Silverview . . . Here le Carré is on more familiar territory - what was once known as Mitteleuropa, with its shape-shifting double agents, scarred idealists on the prowl for lost causes

—— Spectator

It has often been said that le Carré is a novelist, not a mere thriller writer. Yet the thing is that, for all his protests that his creations were always more fictional than credited, what he excels at is giving us a plausible peek into the spy's world

—— The Times

[Le Carré's] prose is as quietly impressive as ever and it's a thoroughly enjoyable read. It makes for bittersweet reading - the final work of a master, on fine form

—— Daily Express

Promises to be filled with intrigue, surprises and timely meditations on the relationship between individuals and nations

—— i

One of the great moral writers of recent times

—— Metro

First-rate prose and a fascinating plot . . . a fitting coda to a remarkable career

—— Publishers Weekly
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