Evi
- 4
- reviews
- 17
- helpful votes
- 262
- ratings

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Stop the Press
- An Inspector Appleby novel
- By: Michael Innes
- Narrated by: Matt Addis
- Length: 17 hrs and 33 mins
- Unabridged
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Famous writer, Richard Eliot, has written numerous detective novels, featuring 'The Spider', a daring, clever criminal in earlier books, and an equally canny private investigator in later ones. But when he comes to life - first to burgle an odd neighbour, then to harass the Eliot family, and finally to attend his own 'birthday party' - Inspector John Appleby is sent to investigate.
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Title is actually Stop Press
- By Evi on 03-24-15
- Stop the Press
- An Inspector Appleby novel
- By: Michael Innes
- Narrated by: Matt Addis
Title is actually Stop Press
Reviewed: 03-24-15
Excellent Appleby, excellently read. I don't really feel the need to review it, but I do feel the need for Audible to get the title right.
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1 person found this helpful
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Birdcage Walk
- By: Kate Riordan
- Narrated by: Peter Kenny
- Length: 12 hrs and 5 mins
- Unabridged
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George Woolfe is a young working class East London printmaker in 1900. Frustrated by the constraints of his class and station, he sees an opportunity to escape when, by chance, he meets Charles Booth, author of one of the most comprehensive social surveys of London ever undertaken. But this apparently auspicious encounter has tragic consequences for George who, within six months, is charged with the murder of a young woman. But did he do it?
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Grim
- By Evi on 08-26-14
- Birdcage Walk
- By: Kate Riordan
- Narrated by: Peter Kenny
Grim
Reviewed: 08-26-14
The view of working-class London is predictably grim, but the story has no uplifting moments. I read for entertainment and escape, and this one didn't work for me. Absolutely no humor.
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1 person found this helpful
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Two for Sorrow
- By: Nicola Upson
- Narrated by: Davina Porter
- Length: 14 hrs and 56 mins
- Unabridged
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They were the most horrific crimes of a new century: the murders of newborn innocents for which two British women were hanged at Holloway Prison in 1903. Decades later, mystery writer Josephine Tey has decided to write a novel based on Amelia Sach and Annie Walters, the notorious “Finchley baby farmers,” unaware that her research will entangle her in the desperate hunt for a modern-day killer.
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Fair Game?
- By Carole T. on 10-28-16
- Two for Sorrow
- By: Nicola Upson
- Narrated by: Davina Porter
Very dark. Very.
Reviewed: 11-09-12
I read the first 2 books in the series and they were somewhat similar to what Tey might have written. This one is grim, dark and really unpleasant--if you don't really want to Go There. The murder was grisly, the subject a real downer. I felt betrayed. If you like modern, gory violence this is your book.
If you like classic mysteries, run fast in the opposite direction.
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10 people found this helpful

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What Happened at Hazelwood
- By: Michael Innes
- Narrated by: Lucy Paterson, Christopher Webster
- Length: 8 hrs and 12 mins
- Unabridged
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The Simney family, of Hazlewood Hall, have a dubious history. Sir George Simney, who was travelling in Australia before the baronetcy fell to him, sleeps with a shotgun by his side. When he is found dead in the library, the Reverend Adrian Deamer will not rest until he has discovered who is responsible. This is an absorbing tale narrated by Simney's widow, Nicolette, and by young Harold, who has just joined the CID.
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Innes at his best!
- By Evi on 10-12-12
- What Happened at Hazelwood
- By: Michael Innes
- Narrated by: Lucy Paterson, Christopher Webster
Innes at his best!
Reviewed: 10-12-12
No Appleby--except for a couple of references: "What would Appleby do" (WWAD?) But it's full of Innes's humor, red herrings, great characters, elaborate summation and satisfying victims and solution(s). It is told from the point of view of 2 different people, and the 2 readers were splendid.
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2 people found this helpful