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Mass Market Paperback Harm's Way Book

ISBN: 0553251910

ISBN13: 9780553251913

Harm's Way

(Book #11 in the Inspector Sloan Series)

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

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Book Overview

It was the task of the reconnaissance party of the Berebury Footpaths Society to see that the path was clear. And so it was until a passing crow dropped something exceedingly sinister before their... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Harm's Way by Catherine Aird

Another clever British mystery from Catherine Aird. "Harm's Way" is part of her continuing series starring CID Detective Inspector C.D. Sloan who plies his trade in the English countryside. This case begins with the discovery of a human finger--dropped by a crow. Now DI Sloan must ferret out the clues to discover: where's the body; who's the body; and how it came to be missing a finger. With his less-than-helpful aide, Detective Constable Crosby, CD weeds through a cast of missing persons and motives galore only to find the crime is for one of the oldest, and most common, reasons. Aird writes tight and entertaining mysteries with all the droll humor expected from an English author. I do warn readers, though, that if they aren't familiar with the 'Queen's English', British mannerisms, and British culture...you may not enjoy "Harm's Way" and CD as much as I do.

A Real Puzzler This One.

In C.D. Sloan's most bizarre case to date, a human finger turns up on a walkway in the country. This sends Sloan and his inimitable sidekick Crosby on the trail to find a corpse, and then to find a murderer. Those readers who don't like British Procedurals done in the classic format probably don't appreciate Catherine Aird as much as those of us that do like these, but she writes wonderful mysteries. The plots are always tight, and the characters are drawn very well, and everything is done so understated and so verry, verry, British. She writes with a tongue-in-cheek at all times, and the understated remarks and asides that come from her detective are wonderful. They are funny, warm and human. We also see a good example of the "long arm of the law" in this book as Sloan gets help from everywhere to track his killer. Wonderful little book, and one of the best puzzlers in this series.

A crow, a finger, and a missing corpse

The Berebury Country Footpaths Society's rallying cry - "Every walk a challenge" - usually throws down a gauntlet in front of the owner of the land over which they propose to walk rather than the walkers, if the land has an official public footpath or right of way. The challenge for their walk over Footpath 79 turns out not to be the walk itself, but the decomposing human finger dropped by a crow in front of Wendy Lamport while she checks out the state of the footpath prior to the walk.According to Dr. Dabbe, the Berebury police pathologist, the finger isn't medical waste - somewhere an unburied human body is lying in the open where a crow can pick off anything it wants. In the farming area of Great Rooden - which is also fox-hunting country - where could a corpse have lain long enough to get into this state? And who could it be, since no missing person reports seem to tally with the finger?Of course, it could be any of several unaccounted-for people who aren't the usual type of missing person: the alcoholic black-sheep son of a local respectable farmer, an unfaithful husband with a mistress somewhere, or a financier who pulled a fast fade just ahead of the auditors.Inspector CD Sloan and his assistant, Constable Crosby, first have to "catch their hare" - find the corpse. My compliments to any reader who deduces where the body was stashed before the search parties locate it. Once they find it, there's no doubt that this is murder, but plenty of doubt that the owner of the property on which it was found had any knowledge of it.Apart from the murder and its clever cover-up, we finally get a chance to meet perpetual constable Ted Mason of Great Rooden: the bane of Superintendent Leeyes' existence, since he can't be manipulated by the carrot (promotion would mean leaving Great Rooden) or the stick (he's a good cop; Great Rooden is the quietest beat in the county through his efforts).
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