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38. Full Dark House by Christopher Fowler

Further expanding my horizons in crime novels.

I love Fowler's Psychoville so I was pretty intrigued when I found out he does mystery novels as well. At least one of you has been really impressed with at least one of the Bryant and May novels.

The story starts with Arthur Bryant of the Metropolitan Police's Peculiar Crimes Unit being blown up in the Unit's offices. In order to solve his killing, his partner John May has to revisit their first ever case together, which happened during World War II, investigating bizarre deaths in a theatre doing a very-nearly obscene version of Offenbach's Orphée aux enfers.

This didn't immediately grab me, but I'm not sure why. It has elements I usually find fascinating and the writing doesn't suck. Maybe it's because it is, at least in parts, too self-consciously quirky and eccentric for me.

Having said that, I stayed up far too late last night because I couldn't wait to find out Who Dun It, so obviously I got sucked in at some point. I'd probably grab another one from the library if it's there.
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42.London Orbital by Iain Sinclair

Iain Sinclair walks around the M25 (or as close to the M25 as he can) and writes about it. In a random, stream-of-consciousness sort of way. He is particularly fixated on how many old psychiatric hospitals (and a smallpox isolation hospital) were situated near to what is now the M25, and before that how it was the "right" distance from London for rich people to have their country estates. He uses the word "psychogeography" a lot.

This book rocks, but I had to renew it from the library about three times. It is not particularly easy going and I found that my head had to be in exactly the right place in order to take any of it in. It is, however, full of exactly the sort of useless trivia I find riveting. More than worth the effort.

43. Thud! by Terry Pratchett

I haven't enjoyed a Pratchett book this much in years. I never thought about it before, but I think my favourite Discworld novels are the City Watch ones. I really like all the Watch characters. In Thud! Pratchett takes on immigration and religious fundamentalism, Blackberries and other PDAs (if they had little imps in them, I'd have one) and the Da Vinci Code. On top of that, I found myself genuinely curious about the solution to the mystery.

44. Psychoville by Christopher Fowler

Sunday's Bibliogoth selection and another re-read for me. It suffers a little when you know the ending, but I still ripped through it very quickly.

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