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Paperback A Piece of Justice Book

ISBN: 031229252X

ISBN13: 9780312292522

A Piece of Justice

(Book #2 in the Imogen Quy Series)

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Book Overview

Biography is usually a safe profession. Even rather sedate. But more than one biographer has found that writing about the late great mathematician Gideon Summerfield leads to a hasty retreat. Or... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Depth, intellectual tickle and more-pretty damn good mystery

Remarkably delightful however low-key academic mystery set in Cambridge where our sleuth is the college nurse at St. Agatha's. It's a short book but packed with fascination. For example, I'm not intense about quilts nor fabrics but found both to be fascinating and of intellectual quality as well. Not the mention the theory and practice of biography. There's much in this mystery to tickle, provoke and appreciate.

Piecing out quilts and mysteries - Imogen Quy

"When I take a full view and circle of myself without this reasonable moderator, and equal piece of justice, death, I do conceive myself the miserablest person extant. Were there not another life that I hope for, all the vanities of this world should not entreat a moment's breath from me. Could the devil work my belief to imagine I could never die, I would not outlive that very thought." - Sir Thomas Browne, RELIGIO MEDICI, part I, section 38 (one of Lord Peter Wimsey's favourite books) After reading THRONES, DOMINATIONS and learning that she was continuing Sayers' Lord Peter Wimsey stories in A PRESUMPTION OF DEATH, I was curious to see what Walsh's writing is like taken alone, free of my existing opinions about Lord Peter. A PIECE OF JUSTICE is Walsh's second Imogen Quy (rhymes with 'why') mystery, thus also serving as an independent check on Walsh's handling of series characters. Starting on the library's copy one weekend afternoon, I set it aside somewhere about chapter 12 - because I only had about an hour to get back there and check out THE WYNDHAM CASE before I'd miss my chance for another week. :) The books can be read out of order without missing anything crucial to understanding the characters in A PIECE OF JUSTICE or spoiling THE WYNDHAM CASE. What impresses me most about Walsh's writing in the Quy books is that nothing goes to waste - the writing is watertight. Anything that happens serves to provide clues or illuminate character - and just as the reader might dismiss an incident as only one or the other, Walsh may turn the tables. As a consequence of this storytelling style, on the other hand, the landscape is *not* littered with standard red-herring tools such as characters who exist only to divert reader suspicion from the real culprit(s) - like the extra 2 or 3 board members of a firm hiring Nero Wolfe, or the non-entity sibling who's quietly pruned from the cast list in a BBC adaptation of a Marple novel. The lack of clutter strengthens the story, although it entails working without a safety net in terms of misdirection on the puzzle side. As I favour story over puzzle aspects in mysteries, that doesn't bother me. Imogen works part-time as school nurse at St. Agatha's College, Cambridge. As a member of the Newnham Quilter's Club, her inquisitive mind turns naturally to the love of patterns that run across the entire surface of a finished work - she is, of course, among the few who love designing the quilts the group works on, rather than just following through a pattern laid down by others. (Throughout JUSTICE, Walsh provides a recurring pattern herself, concerning traditional activities that may entail little formal recognition, but are vital to well-being or comfort: crafts rather than arts.) When Imogen's favourite lodger - Fran, a starving grad student - lands ghost-writing work from Professor Maverack, her advisor (in Cambridge-speak, he's supervising her), on a biography of the late Gideon Summerfield, Imogen isn't ha

Her ability to combine academia and quilting is unique.

Jill Paton Walsh has a way of drawing you into a mystery that you need to read to the end in order to piece together all the details. As a quilt lover, I enjoyed the way she worked quilting and the mathematics of quilting as well as the artistry into her underlying story. And you can't help but feeling you know an Imogene Quy somewhere - either past or present. Worth picking up and reading.

An excellent mystery full of twists and turns

There are no new plots. Walsh not only acknowledges this truism, she makes it the theme of her novel. Patterns repeat in quilts and in biographies, but we are saved from boredom by the differences in color and fabric, and by the twists that individual personalities impose on old stories. As the patterns repeat in this novel, the reader soon learns to watch for those twists. The general outlines of the original crime seem clear from the start, but Walsh pulls together all the threads (pardon the pun) with a master's touch. As she plays with the reoccurring themes, the author also repeats ideas that appear in other works. I noted oblique references to at least three other great mystery novels with plots tied to the British University system; there are probably more. After reading this book, I can understand why Walsh was chosen to complete Dorothy L. Sayers's Thrones, Dominations. Don't be fooled by the slenderness of A Piece of Justice. This book has more substance than many volumes three times its size.

Wonderful story!

Although I have not yet read "Thrones, Dominations," I have read "A Piece of Justice," and I have not been so impressed by a mystery (original, classy!) since finishing all of Sayers' work. Paton Walsh is a great mystery writer in her own right -- give this one a try!
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