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The Sirens Sang Of Murder (1990)

The Sirens Sang of Murder (1990)

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Genre
Series
Rating
4.16 of 5 Votes: 4
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ISBN
0440207452 (ISBN13: 9780440207450)
Language
English
Publisher
dell

About book The Sirens Sang Of Murder (1990)

On the subject of the pen Julia became indignant. She had never heard of such a thing -- or at any rate she had never read of such a thing -- or at any rate not in any piece of respectable crime fiction published since the beginning of the Second World War. A physical object, forsooth, with the initials of the suspect engraved on it -- why, it was worse than a fingerprint....If the progress of the past half century was to count for nothing, then one might as well go back, said Julia scathingly, to murders committed by means of arsenic or for motives of matrimonial jealousy."I do not doubt,: I said, "that in a crime novel having any pretensions of modernity, the pen would be quite inadmissible. As a mere historian, however, there is nothing I can do about it. Nature, as we know, does imitate Art, but I fear that she often falls short of the highest standards. Were you to turn your attention from fictional crimes to those reported in the newspapers, you would find that people are still leaving fingerprints and murdering unfaithful spouses for all the world as if they were living in the 1920s. In the more backward parts of the country they may even still be poisoning one another with arsenic. We cannot ignore the pen for the sake of literary fashion."If you don't enjoy that passage, then this mystery is not for you. You should instead go search out a novel like the one Julia and Cantrip are collaborating on, where the suave, handsome Carruthers saves the shrinking damsel from unwanted advances and clasps her to his manly chest.

What a dreadful slog! And therein, dear readers, lies the fault for this intrepid reader, or if not the fault then that is to say the foremost reason for which this tome became a mirelike ooze through which one waded, like a water-fowl whose feathers were so besmirched with odious sludge as to make of flight an impossiblity, towards a faint horizon in fair hope of rescue, or indeed of justification for the journey. Holy cow! I have so far been able to distance myself from ..... egads! I can not stop myself from rushing o'er .... help!If you like this sort of faux-eighteenth century satire mixed with red herrings galore, then you will probably like this series. As for me, I was attracted by the Edward Gorey cover like a crow to shiny objects, and have learned not to judge a book by its cover.

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Nothing is certain except death and taxes, and this book has them both. The junior barristers of Lincoln’s Inn become involved with a group of tax planners who are trying to locate the heirs to a trust fund. There’s a complicated scheme concerned with tax avoidance, and much of the action takes place in the famous tax havens of the Channel Islands, the Cayman Islands and Monaco.This was an amusing read, but I think it’s the weakest of the three books so far. The plot involves numerous coincidences, and I never did quite understand the intricacies of the trust arrangement.As usual, Julia’s character is the most fun. It begins with her indignant reaction to the judge who disapproved of her client, who as “an innocent property developer, had entered into a perfectly straightforward transaction which happened to involve a bank in Amsterdam and one or two companies in the Netherlands Antilles and which therefore happened to result in his having no tax to pay.” The judge, on the other hand, seemed to consider it “the duty of every citizen to arrange his affairs in such a way as to maximise his liabilities to the Inland Revenue, and of his professional advisors to assist him in achieving that result.”Like the first two books this one is partially epistolary, with letters arriving from Cantrip via the office’s brand new Telex machine, a device which is providing Cantrip a great deal of amusement.
—Jamie

“Yes,” said Julia. “So the impasse—which I take to be the correct expression for a situation in which no one makes a pass at anyone—continued throughout my stay . . . except that on the way back to our hotel I tripped over something, and Patrick took my arm to prevent me falling over. This had a very peculiar effect on me, even worse than the breathlessness and indigestion which I have previously mentioned—I felt as if suppose an ice cream might feel when hot chocolate sauce is poured over it.” p. 68The trouble with real life is that you don’t know whether you’re the hero or just some nice chap who gets bumped off in chapter five to show what a rotter the villain is without anyone minding too much. p. 171Unfortunately, Good Reads doesn't have Cauldwell's fourth book, The Sybil in Her Grave, so I'll have to state with sob-laden gasps that this is the last book Cauldwell wrote and the erudite, ironic, and oh-so-full-of-him/herself Hilary will solve no more murders.
—Beth

The detailed discussions of British tax law make this installment of the series a bit more heavy going than previous novels, but I thought it was well worth it. Cantrip is a great source of misquotings and malapropisms, and the snippets of the romance he and Julia are working on are great send-ups of both female-oriented romance and male romances such as the Bond books (and, naturally, there is a side trip to Monte Carlo).probably not the best of the series with which to begin, but still delightful for the dedicated fan who doesn't mind using her brain a bit.
—Kestrell

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