• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Penny Reads

Penny Reads

Step inside a world of books. Vintage and modern. Children's and Adult.

  • Home
  • About Penny Reads
  • Ladybird Books
  • Annuals and related books
  • Vintage books
  • Privacy Policy and Disclosure
  • Contact Penny

Agatha Christie – Lucy Worsley

September 19, 2023 by penny Leave a Comment

My love affair with Agatha Christie

When at university and studying for my finals, I lived in a flat above a charity shop. This charity shop was for some local animal charity and was the kind of place that sold things cheap. Very, very cheap. I still regularly use a pile of side plates that I picked up there for just 10p each, but the other thing they sold for just 10p was paperback books. In particular Agatha Christie books, which they always seemed to have a load of.

Living on my own at the time and spending pretty much every spare minute studying I struggled to fall asleep at night as my brain was just going at 100mph. My solution was to pick up an Agatha Christie book. The plots were gentle enough that I felt relaxed reading them, but at the same time they engaged my brain in trying to figure out who the murderer was so I stopped thinking about engineering formulae and complex mathematics instead. And so my Agatha Christie love affair started.

Finding my people

The classic age of detective fiction has always been one that I’ve loved and over the years I’m slowly working my way through many of the titles from the British Library Crime Classics series and picking those up secondhand where possible. During my many hours of driving kids I was on the look out for something new to listen to and earlier this year happened across the Shedunnit podcast on BBC Sounds. The first episode I listened to was entitled Agatha’s Archaeologists and as I listened along I realised two things. Firstly that I actually knew very little about Agatha Christie myself, and secondly that I had finally found “my people”. But I was left wondering how it had taken me so long to find them.

In the same week I took the kids to the local library and Lucy Worsley’s Biography of Agatha Christie caught my eye. I picked it up and started reading it there and then, and was instantly hooked. The fact that both these links with the golden age of crime fiction came so close together was a tad surprising, but also a very happy coincidence. Another coincidence is the fact that there is a actually a whole episode of the Shedunnit podcast with Lucy Worsley as a guest talking about her book. Also well worth a listen.

Agatha Christie – A very elusive woman

Back to Lucy Worsley’s book itself. Although it’s hard to separate the subject from the author as Worsley’s style of writing means that as I read it I could so clearly hear her voice telling me all about Agatha and her life. The writing style draws you in in exactly the same way that her numerous television programmes do. A voice of such passion and fact combined that it draws the reader (or viewer) along with her. Her enthusiasm for everything is just so contagious.

For me, just one read of this book isn’t enough. I need to go out and buy a copy and read it again whilst also re-reading all of Agatha Christie’s works in chronological order. I need now to read each book again and cross-refer to the point in her life when Agatha wrote it. To be able to see the influences of what was going on elsewhere, and also see how her characters develop over time, sometimes based on influential characters and experiences in her own life.

I also want to take a step back and imagine what Agatha’s life must have been like. I’m keen to visit her home in Devon (now owned by the National Trust), but also to go back to The Old Swan in Harrogate, the hotel where she was found after she famously went “missing’. Her travels round the world which provided inspiration for so many of her books also fascinate me.

Of course there’s absolutely nothing new in what I’m hoping to learn. Many others have done their own research on Agatha Christie’s life and works, and the Shedunnit podcast covers many of the topics in excellent detail, but Lucy Worsley’s book has given me a drive and enthusiasm to learn so much more for myself. If that’s not a sign of an excellent biography then I really don’t know what is.

A televisual delight too

And if re-reading the biography alongside all of Agatha Christie’s books, and catching up with the whole back catalogue of Shedunnit podcasts isn’t enough to keep me out of mischief there is also Agatha Christie: Lucy Worsley on The Mystery Queen on BBC iPlayer too. I fear my to do list might take a bit of a back seat in my life for a while.

Where to buy

Lucy Worsley’s Agatha Christie biography is available to buy online here.

Disclaimer: All links to Amazon in this post are affiliate links. If you buy anything through these links it will cost you no more than if you’d arrived there on your own, but I will receive a small commission. Thank you for all purchases that are made through affiliate links. It is very much appreciated.

Filed Under: Biography / Autobiography

Good Detective Guide – Catching Crooks

July 3, 2023 by penny Leave a Comment

I’m going through a bit of a stage in life where I’m reminiscing my childhood – a lot! A lovely childhood in which I was very fortunate to be surrounded by books and regularly taken to both bookshops and the local library. Nowadays whenever I go near anywhere selling secondhand books I’m always drawn to the children’s section – looking for things that I had in my own childhood. I’m pretty sure that’s where my Ladybird collection started, but I don’t limit myself to Ladybird books.

As a child I was obsessed with the idea of being either a Detective or a Spy. That was basically all I wanted to do and it possibly explains why I still love crime fiction as much as I do. These fascinations came from two series of books published by Usborne and I can still clearly remember stumbling across these books for the first time and then spending hours and hours pouring over them when I must have been Junior school age.

From what I can remember (and what I’ve pieced together from the Internet) there were two series. The Good Detective Guide and The Good Spy Guide. Each consisted of three books, but there was also a combined version of each: The Detective’s Handbook and the Spy’s Guidebook.

As a child I think I had all the separate versions, but also one of the combined versions too. All I think bought in a random little stationery shop in Rotherham where my parents used to often take us on a Saturday whilst they bought stationery for their office.

The cover of the Usborne book Catching Crooks. A blue cover with a cartoon picture showing a thief climbing a drainpipe with a bag of swag dropping jewels down into the hands of a detective who looks something like Inspector Clueseau in a blue trench coat and hat. A second detective in brown is hiding round the corner looking up at the thief with a dog next to him licking his lips at the sight of the thief.

Clearing out our garage recently I stumbled across a pile of children’s books that I must have picked up in a moment of longing for the simpler childhood that I had, compared to those my kids seem to have today. One of these was Catching Crooks from the Good Detective Guide series and it instantly took me right back to being sat in my garage den at my parents house as an 8 or 9 year old.

Catching Crooks went alongside Fakes and Forgeries and Clues and Suspects and I must have spent hours and hours reading and re-reading these books. In particular I remember being obsessed with finger prints for a while and my friend and I making sure that we took the fingerprints of our bemused parents and then we made ourselves a little box file to keep them in. We were convinced that one day the police might knock at the door asking for our help with a local crime and we’d then be able to pull our our fingerprint cards with a flourish and prove that no one in our families was responsible.

A page from the book showing how to take fingerprints and with a suggestion that you filed them all in a box file - which I did!

We drew maps of the local area, looked for safe routes should we ever had to escort valuables through the area and kept a log of cars and their numberplate going down our street. I now wonder what the neighbours thought we were up to!

I wasn’t just obsessed with being a detective though. The spy series included Secret Messages, Tracking and Trailing and Disguise and Make Up and again I poured over all these titles, convinced that I’d soon get the call to use everything I’d learnt to be the first female James Bond. After all I’d mastered using lemon juice as an invisible ink so what more did I need to learn?

A double page spread showing how to escort a VIP. It shows that in a situation where a VIP is visiting an embassy there are detectives stationed all around. One of teh detectives actually takes the role of the VIP and the VIP is disguised as a detective instead. This blow my little childhood mind immensely!

Oh the innocence of it all is adorable as I look back. There’s part of me though that wishes my kids could be that obsessed about something they found in a book rather than just being obsessed with Minecraft and Roblox!

I’m desperately trying to declutter our house at the moment so really don’t need any more books in the house, but I can’t deny that there’s a part of me that would love to have both series again so I can properly reminisce over all the titles. Both spy and detective work has moved on considerably from the 1980s, but there’s a big part of me that wishes it hadn’t, and that we could go back to old school techniques in a simpler world.

Should you too want to go back to the 80s for some innocent job training for kids then eBay is where you need to go. Both the Detective Guide and the Spy Handbook are available, and not that expensive either. I wonder if either MI5 of the Police have any jobs going for a middle aged mum of three that can blend in quite well at the school gates?

Filed Under: Vintage books

Wrong About Japan – Peter Carey

March 20, 2023 by penny Leave a Comment

My review of the book Wrong About Japan by Peter Carey – please see the end of this post for a full disclaimer.

I realised recently that that last time I left the UK was, I think, late 2019. When I look back at how much I travelled between 2017 and then it seems unimaginable that my passport would have laid in a drawer for all that time. But then again, I suppose none of us expected a global pandemic to change so much. What is clear though is that I have a huge need to dust off said passport and get my little family back out on the road (or rails!) before I go stir crazy. That need has also been influencing where I’ve been looking in bookshops lately.

I’m suddenly finding myself in the travel section and in particular cursing the way that Waterstones seem to have decided to mix together travel guides with travel writing so that if you look for a country (arranged alphabetically rather than by region!) you then find both books about that country and all the regular guide books next to each other. Fine if you are planning a trip somewhere specific, but as frustrating as anything if you just want to be inspired in general. And don’t even get me started about what it means for all those travel writers who write books that cover more than one country. It also stops you from thinking “oh I really liked that writer, I wonder where else they’ve been” unless you have your phone to hand to look them up online instead. Talking to the booksellers in Waterstones it seems I’m not the only one annoyed by this, but sadly nothing seems to have been done to rectify the situation yet.

A copy of the book Wrong About Japan by Peter Carey laid on my lap. A bookmark can be seen sticking out of the bottom of the book. The cover is in a palate of pinks and purples with a snow capped mountain in the background and buildings with Japanese signs in the foreground. A road leads into the picture with Japanese text on it. There are wires or cables criss-crossing the street.

Japan

What this change in Waterstones policy did mean though was that I had to narrow down where I wanted some travel inspiration for. Based on my eldest’s sudden love of Japanese manga and anime (and the fact that I still regret not going 20 years ago when I had the chance) I picked the Japan section and found myself picking up a copy of Peter Carey’s Wrong About Japan.

The blurb on the back cover made this sound the perfect choice. Carey took a trip to Japan with his twelve year old son, but his son insisted that they were only there to look at manga, anime and other “cool stuff”. Exactly the sort of thing that my twelve year old would say right now and I had visions of being able to share the book with her and plan an imaginary trip with all the cool things that she’d like to see out there as a result. Unfortunately that’s not quite how it all turned out.

The bit that wasn’t apparent to me from the blurb on the back of this book is that Peter Carey has been to Japan before. It turns out that he’s reasonably knowledgable about Japanese culture and has a network of contacts across Japan that allowed him to make a series of appointments to meet what I believe are key players in the manga and anime worlds. In contrast I’ve read quite a few books about Japan, but know virtually nothing about manga and anime other than them originating in Japan and being massive there.

Lacking previous knowledge

Wrong About Japan would probably read better if you knew something about anime and manga. If you understood, and appreciated, who it was Peter and his son went to meet. Some of the general points he has to make about what has influenced anime and manga in Japan’s history is useful and interesting, but at points the book really felt like I was just scratching the surface and not understanding what was really going on as I didn’t have enough background knowledge. There were also some strange sections where Carey launched into quoting other books that he’d read about things like the history of Samurai and disappearing down rabbit holes as a result. He’d then say that he needed to move on whilst on a visit as his son was getting bored and I could completely see why!

Travel is enhanced by meeting people

To me one of the most fascinating parts of the book was the boy that his son made friends with over the internet before arriving in Japan (this was set in 2002 so before social media exploded) and what it was like meeting him in person. What an amazing opportunity for his son to see how a boy of a similar age lived in Tokyo and how they consumed manga and anime. Yet it seemed like Carey didn’t want his son to have these opportunities at all. If anything they were downright rude to Takashi and passed up on most of what he wanted to show the boy in Tokyo. It left me feeling sad and frustrated on his behalf. Travel is so enhanced by the people that you meet and interact with and for a twelve year old boy I feel he would have got so much more out of really getting to know Takashi, rather than being bored following his father’s itinerary.

What to read next about Japan?

I’m left feeling frustrated in my efforts to scratch my Japanese travel itch right now. Friends have recommended A Beginners Guide to Japan and Hokkaido Highway Blues and I think these may be a good starting point to dip my toe back into Japan. Years ago I remember enjoying Culture Shock Japan and whilst it was written before the internet changed everything and hence it’s no longer in print, I might see if I can try to find a copy secondhand so I can remember why I first wanted to visit.

Meanwhile…

In an attempt to find something Japanese related on television to watch with the kids we ended up finding Michael Palin’s visit there in an episode of Full Circle. This then took us to his fascinating Channel 5 two-part programme where he goes to North Korea and I’m now back in a world where I just want to sit and watch back to back travel programmes and book tickets to random places based on what I’ve watched. This week the next series of Race Across the World returns to our screens (after a Covid enforced break) and I am so excited. I’ve written about previous series over on my travel blog and I’m pretty sure I’ll be close to booking tickets to a far flung part of Canada once the series airs!

Disclaimer…

This post contains affiliate links. If you go to Amazon via them and but anything I receive a small commission. It costs you no more than if you had arrived at Amazon under your own steam. Thank you very much for any purchases you make as it is greatly appreciated.

Filed Under: Travel Books

Tooth and Nail – Ian Rankin

October 6, 2022 by penny Leave a Comment

Back in April I spoke about my personal challenge of trying to read the whole of Ian Rankin’s Rebus series again from the start, and, in-between other books, that’s exactly what I’ve been doing. It’s strange though because in a way Rebus feels like an old friend, but the early Rebus books don’t quite have the fully formed character that we all got used to. Then again, they say that life’s experiences shape a person and I’m going back and seeing exactly what shaped John Rebus into the man he is in those later books.

The cover of Ian Rankin's Tooth and Nail book.

When I started with Knots and Crosses it felt strange going back and meeting him all over again. Then the second book, Hide and Seek (which I don’t seem to have written about), is a whole different type of book again. It delved into the occult a bit and if I’m totally honest I found it a bit slow going in parts. The third book – the one I searched charity shops for for absolutely ages – Tooth and Nail couldn’t have been more different though. The pace of this book felt incredibly fast, even more so compared to the dragging of Hide and Seek, and it felt like I got through it in mere days, leaving me hungry for more of Rebus’ adventures.

Down South

The most striking thing about Tooth and Nail is that it’s not set in Scotland. Rebus has come south to London to help the Met Police catch a serial killer and, apart from a day trip flying back to Glasgow to give evidence in court, all the action is set there. And boy is there a lot of action!

The hunt for serial killer Wolfman sees Rebus back in the same city as his ex-wife and daughter and I think Tooth and Nail strikes a really good balance between the drama that you’d expect in a crime fiction book alongside some really tender moments with Rebus’ thoughts about his old family and what he now misses. Certainly there is a vulnerability to him away from his familiar stomping ground that I don’t think we’ve seen before.

Gruesome and over the top?

One thing that really did surprise me in Tooth and Nail was just how gruesome it becomes in some of the descriptions of the actions of the serial killer Wolfman. Definitely more so than in the first two Rebus books. It felt a bit shocking in a way, but I now need to remind myself as to how much bloody detail Ian Rankin goes into in later books, as I simply can’t remember.

Without giving too much away, I can say the the main climax of the book results in a chase across central London taking in some of the major landmarks and finishing in a very high profile place indeed. Whilst it gave readers a really good image of where the action was taking place, at the same time it also felt rather unrealistic. I know Wolfman was supposedly one of London’s most prolific serial killers ever, but even still, this part of the book felt a bit more like a film setting than a book.

My thoughts

Out of the three Rebus books I’ve read so far this year, Tooth and Nail has to be my favourite as the pace of the story was much more like what I remember Rebus books to be like. I also think this is a story I’ve read before. One of Wolfman’s “calling cards” was definitely very familiar to me and with this second read I possibly looked more carefully at the clues along the way.

The book was originally released under the title Wolfman, and actually I think that first title helps you get a bit more ready for the gruesome scenes that the book contains. They certainly seemed horror-like in places and that’s the general vibe that the title Wolfman gives me. I’m still left wondering why this book is one of the hardest to find in charity shops though. Or maybe it’s just a quirk of the charity shops I’ve been looking in.

Tooth and Nail is available to buy online here.

Like Crime Fiction?

If you’re interested to see what other crime fictions I’ve been reading lately then you can see my reviews here.

Filed Under: Crime Fiction

Murder Before Evensong – Rev Richard Coles

September 29, 2022 by penny Leave a Comment

Oh how I looked forward to this book. I loved Fathomless Riches when I read it years ago and follow Richard on Twitter and really enjoy his TV and radio appearances. As a crime fiction fan the promise of this book just seemed like a marriage made in heaven. But unfortunately, whilst I enjoyed Murder Before Evensong, I just didn’t love it like I hoped to. It’s such a shame, but I can’t quite put my finger on why it didn’t work for me.

Introducing Canon Daniel Clement

Murder Before Evensong is the first book in the Canon Daniel Clement series and there’s no doubt in where Richard found some of his inspiration for this main character. Daniel is Rector of Champton and has been in post there for eight years. He lives in the vicarage with his widowed mother Audrey and his two dachshunds. If you follow Richard at all you’ll know about his love of dachshunds.

In the book Daniel announced his plan to the parish to install a lavatory in his church. Not something that sounds too contentious, but at the same time something you can see some people getting their knickers in a twist about. Daniel didn’t realise just how much opposition he was going to receive in Champton though. Why are locals so against having a toilet handy for during those long sermons?

As Daniel tries to understand why it soon becomes apparent that the prospect of a new toilet isn’t the only problem. Anthony Bowness, cousin of Bernard de Floures, patron of Champton, is found murdered inside the church. Stabbed in the neck with a pair of secateurs left behind by Beth church flower arrangers. The police descend on Champton to try to find the murderer, but Daniel realises that understanding his local community will be the key to working out who is responsible.

Cosy crime fiction, but…

Murder Before Evensong has all the element of a classic English crime novel. A village setting with a member of the clergy involved, alongside a posh aristocratic family makes it sound like something from Cluedo or an Agatha Christie book. Being a man of the cloth, Rev Richard Coles obviously knows his religious stuff and there was a lot of “church stuff” in there. Bits about church services and practices and even references to the bible that I’m afraid passed me by a bit. As someone who isn’t a regular church goer I didn’t understand it all, or necessarily see its relevance to the plot. A few bits to fit in with the Canon’s role maybe, but there just seemed to be more of it than was necessary for the storyline.

As you’d expect in any English village there are a lot of “characters” living there, but these village characters didn’t really translate that well to characters in a crime book. Not even in a cosy crime novel as this is. I found them a bit dull to be honest with you. I know that when this book was announced there were a lot of comparisons with Richard Osman, but his characters in The Thursday Murder Club wipe the floor with the residents of Champton I’m afraid.

The book was also (slightly weirdly) set in the 1980s. After reading Val McDermid’s A Darker Domain I thought this might be another excellent way to delve into a bit more of 80s social history, but no. You’d almost miss that it was set in the 80s were it not for a few mentions of 80s TV shows and Eurovision. Oh, and the fact that no one has a mobile phone. IT almost made me wonder why it was set then if it wasn’t being made a bigger part of the story.

Oh I feel all a bit sad about Murder Before Evensong. It had so much promise, but just didn’t live up to it. Such a shame as the cosy crime genre is one that I really enjoy, but I struggle to see how Canon Clement could stretch his detective skills to a second book, let alone a whole series. I guess a charity shop a few years down the line might have the answer to that.

Where to buy Rev Richard Coles’ books

Murder Before Evensong is available to buy online here. I would however recommend his earlier autobiography Fathomless Riches which is excellent. It is followed by his story of his life as a priest (which I haven’t read yet) in Bringing In The Sheaves. I’ve also heard many people speak high about the book he wrote after the sudden death of his partner David: The Madness of Grief.

Filed Under: Crime Fiction

A Darker Domain – Val McDermid

September 15, 2022 by penny Leave a Comment

I seem to have accidentally managed to curated my film and tv watching with what I’ve been reading lately. Val McDermid’s A Darker Domain couldn’t have fit in more perfectly if I’d tried. It may have been accidental. but it’s led to me realising just how much I don’t know about the Miners’ Strike of the 1980s, even though I was a child living in South Yorkshire at the time. Let me backtrack slightly.

The cover of A Darker Domain by Val McDermid

Miners’ Strike Viewing

My run of delving back into the 1980s started with the film Pride on Netflix. Covering the true story of the lesbian and gay activists that supported the Miners and ended up being matched with the Welsh mining village of Onllwyn. It’s an unlikely partnership and there was quite a lot of prejudice to overcome before firm friendships were made. All this culminated with the Miners coming to march at the 1985 Gay Pride march in London to show solidarity with those that had supported them during the strike.

Pride was quickly followed by Sherwood on BBC 1. This TV series is set in a Nottinghamshire former mining village but in modern times. Two murders take place, but this is a village that was torn apart years ago by events surrounding the Miners’ Strike and the police realise that they have to unpick the present as well as the past to find the killers.

A Darker Domain

Val McDermid’s A Darker Domain is also set after the strike, but this is instead looking at an old Scottish mining community. DI Karen Pirie works in the cold cases team and is already investigating the kidnap of the richest man in Scotland’s daughter and grand-son twenty years ago, when she is then intrigued by a woman coming in to report a miner who went missing at the same time, during the Miners’ Strike. Mick Prentice’s disappearance was not reported at the time though and many thought he’d simply left Scotland to head south to Nottinghamshire as a scab. The shame that brought to his family left behind meant that his disappearance was just taken at face value by many. Now his daughter wants to find Mick as he may be the only chance of saving her ill son’s life.

But just as Karen is starting to unravel some of the circumstances surrounding Mick’s disappearance a discovery in a villa in Tuscany throws some light on the kidnap case. Torn between the two investigations Karen soon begins to realise that there might be links between them, and progress on one of them might help in the other case.

My thoughts

A Darker Domain reminded me of why I fell in love with Val McDermid’s writing. The background information from the 1980s is so utterly fascinating and so well researched that as a reader you are transported back there and it’s like being immersed in a lesson in social history.

Intertwined with the social history is a decent, solid crime fiction story that it is very easy to get completely caught up in. Some other reviewers have said that they felt the ending let the book down and whilst I agree that the ending doesn’t seem quit was strong as the rest of the book, I feel that is more because the rest of the book is so strong and all that just coming to an end is just a bit of a disappointment. I certainly didn’t feel that it wasn’t in keeping with the rest of the book in any way.

Returning to Val McDermid

When I first discovered Val McDermid it was via her Lindsay Gordon and Kate Brannigan series – both of which I now want to go back and re-read. Somehow some of her later series passed me by a bit, especially the Tony Hill and Carol Jordan one, but when I picked up 1979 earlier in the year it really showcased her ability to capture social history so well in her stories. As soon as 1989 comes out in paperback I’ll be trying to pick up Allie Burns’ story again and I’m already looking forward to being transported back to 1989.

Where to buy A Darker Domain

A Darker Domain is available to buy online here. All Val McDermid’s books are here.

Filed Under: Crime Fiction

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Go to page 2
  • Go to page 3
  • Go to page 4
  • Go to page 5
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 20
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Search Penny Reads

Google Ads

Categories

  • Activity Books
  • Biography / Autobiography
  • Black Lives Matter
  • Board Books
  • British Library Crime Classics
  • Children's Books
  • Cook Books
  • Craft Books
  • Crime Fiction
  • Dystopian Fiction
  • Fiction
  • Ladybird Books
  • Learning to Read
  • Non Fiction
  • Parenting Books
  • Picture Books
  • Translated Fiction
  • Travel Books
  • Uncategorized
  • Vintage books
  • Young Adult

Copyright © 2025 · Genesis Sample on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

 

Loading Comments...