Books : Bill Slider Omnibus (Bill Slider Mysteries)

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Author name: Cynthia Harrod-Eagles

 : Bill Slider Omnibus (Bill Slider Mysteries)
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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN num: 9780751526769
ISBN number: 0751526762
Label: Little, Brown Book Group
Manufacturer: Little, Brown Book Group
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 824
Printing Date: December 01, 1998
Publishing house: Little, Brown Book Group
Sale Popularity Level: 262664
Studio: Little, Brown Book Group




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Editor's Notes and Comments:

Product Description:
Bringing together the very first three books in the Bill Slider series—Orchestrated Death, Death Watch, and Necrochip—this omnibus offers three-fold entertainment. In Orchestrated Death, Detective Inspector Bill Slider is never going to make it to the Yard. Passed over for promotion again, the last thing he needs in his life, or on his watch, is an unidentifiable naked female corpse. In Death Watch, when a noted womanizer dies in a sleazy motel and the whole of his murky past comes to light, DI Bill Slider begins to question more than whether the game is worth the candle. As soon as he's solved the motel mystery, Slider's going to have to start putting his own house in order. In Necrochip, Detective Superintendent George Dickson's replacement by DS 'Mad Ivan' Barrington—a new broom determined to sweep clean—is all par for the course for DI Bill Slider, as he faces the unhygienic fact of a dismembered corpse in a catering establishment.




Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - Bill Slider mysteries
Cynthia Harrod-Eagles' plots are wonderfully developed and she certainly has a way with words.



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - This is golden!
I really enjoyed my introduction to the Bill Slider mysteries. Having read the entire Morland Dynasty series I thought I'd try the author's other books. I think Cynthia is a terrific writer and enjoy her puns immensely.



Rated by buyers 3 out of 5 stars - Superior author and character, sleepy mysteries
This is of the variety of murder mystery that is more soap opera than uncovering of complex plot, but Harrod-Eagles is powerful as a writer and insightful as an observer of life, so when read for these details the books are fantastic. However, the mysteries of all three follow the same pattern and intensity is lost over the course of each. Bill Slider is an everyman we would all like to be, namely an honest empathic person lured into deceptive situations by his desire to be forthright in a duplicitious environment, and the assorted cast of characters (Atherton, Joanna, Dickson) are eternal, but there needs to be an increase in pace and complexity. Sometimes the reader feels like a bull waiting for that blue cape, just knowing there is not much behind it except the end of the story. As other reviewers have noted, there are numerous typos, mispellings and text manglings apparently arising from the OCR-based digital conversion of this text from an original print form. I will read more from this author because she is a fantastic writer, but it ain't for the mysteries. (Side note: the author has a female name but writes with great insight of the male psychology, esp. re: sensuality. Brava!)



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - Awful typos spoil an excellent book!
This series was a delight to find, but quite a chore to wade through. The editing errors were simply disgraceful, with several to a page. Can the text have been scanned in from a previous edition? It was distracting, but, after all, quite worth it. I'll buy her other Bill Slider mysteries, but not in the TimeWarner Omnibus editions. Be warned.



Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Won over by Slider
What a find! Why is there no other review here? I have only finished the very first of the 3 novels included in this collection, but I am already won over to Inspector Slider. There is much I admire in, say, P.D. James' Commander Adam Dalgleish, who is a published poet and aide to the Commissioner, many ranks above poor, passed-over Inspector Slider. Like Le Carre's George Smiley, like most of us, Slider is an imperfect and partial man, with recognizable failings, and is lovable for it. Were I to meet Commander Dalgleish, I would instinctively call him "sir" - though he would probably put me at my ease with a few well-chosen words. Slider, however - I'd call him Bill and he'd call me Bob and we'd have a curry together like old pals.

He is carried forward by an almost-crushing sense of responsibility for his world, which makes policing the only possible career for him. But while this has made him a good detective, it doesn't give him a black-and-white view of the world, nor make him a great police administrator. He handles his cases with a skill born of experience and intelligence, but somehow these fail him - or nearly so -- in handling what seem to him to be secondary and confusing matters, his career and private life.

I do not want anyone to get the impression that the writing is as, well, pedestrian as Inspector Slider. He may be a bit of an everyday man but Ms. Harrod-Eagles' prose is wonderfully turned-out. This author is a lively and playful wordsmith, her novel is well-written, and if I handled the language as well as she, I wouldn't just be writing reviews.

Oh, I could gripe that his team is not so well-drawn as I'd like (and Dalgleish's team is, of course - P.D. James has it all wonderfully down and I'll keep reading her!). I could ask that Slider's sergeant, Atherton, be fleshed out more - how'd he become a copper? But maybe, over in Omnibus #2, I'll find that out. I intend to read my way there, and see! The plot, at least in "Orchestrated Death", is a bit pushed-about as well. But months, years, after I read P.D. James, or Le Carre, or any really good writers, what I remember are not the plot turns, but the people I have met in the pages. I will certainly remember Inspector Slider.




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