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  • Dover One

  • Dover Mysteries, Book 1
  • By: Joyce Porter
  • Narrated by: Sam Devereaux
  • Length: 6 hrs and 20 mins
  • 3.7 out of 5 stars (44 ratings)

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Dover One

By: Joyce Porter
Narrated by: Sam Devereaux
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Publisher's summary

For its own very good reasons, Scotland Yard sends Dover off to remote Creedshire to investigate the disappearance of a young housemaid, Juliet Rugg. Though there's every cause to assume that she has been murdered - she gave her favours freely and may even have stooped to a bit of blackmail - no body is to be found.

Weighing in at 16 stone, she couldn't be hard to overlook. But where is she? And why should Dover, of all people, be called upon to find her? Or, for that matter, even bother to solve the damned case?

©1964 Joyce Porter (P)2019 W. F. Howes Ltd

Critic reviews

“Miss Porter shows splendid fertility in comic invention. The comic-horrific ending must be the best crime fiction joke of the year.” (Julian Symons, Sunday Times)

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

The mystery is ... how does he keep his job?

A detective anti-hero. Obnoxious, boorish, self-important, lazy, intimidating, anti-social and someone who repels everyone he meets. I hope poor McGregor manages to get his transfer ... soon!

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2 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Excellent Book

Loved this book on many levels - entertaining, well written and Sam Devereaux rises to the top of my list of the best narrators around. Inspector Dover is interesting, I can see him clearly with his eccentricities and fussy behavior. The pace of the book suits me beautifully - the murder happens early and the story moves along. Devereaux reads like a theater actor, playing all the parts. In this story the murdered woman wears green nail polish, so do I. Strongly recommend this book~

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5 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

The Wittiest Crime Novels

Please record more in this series. They’re wonderful! As is recording actor Sam Devereaux. Thanks,
Molly Haskell

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3 people found this helpful

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    1 out of 5 stars
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Don't bother

Not a single likeable character throughout. Dover is dreadful, his sidekick is inane, and all the side characters are just the worst caricatures. Even the victim was unlikeable; the only pity I felt for her was as a result of all the fat-shaming and vitriol that was directed at her. Every reference to her was about how fat, ugly and promiscuous she was--three facts repeated with such contempt that it was clear that no one was sad she died and felt she deserved it as a result. Additionally, the female police constables were so stupid and whiny that it almost lent credence to Dover's obvious misogyny.

If someone told me that this had been written by a man in the 1900s, I would have believed them. No, that's a lie. Having read a lot of golden age mysteries where where opinions on race, sex, gender, and age are outdated, I can say that even those authors handled the subjects more tactfully than Joyce Porter has.

Read this only if you don't mind hackneyed stereotypes, otherwise you may find yourself both bored and annoyed.

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