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Kate Atkinson : Case Histories
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Author: Kate Atkinson
Title: Case Histories
Moochable copies: No copies available
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Published in: English
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Pages:
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ISBN: 0552772437
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Amazon prices:
$0.01used
$6.78new
Previous givers:
96
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Previous moochers:
96
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Wishlists:
3Sarah Boyce (United Kingdom), Wendy (United Kingdom), giz-angel (United Kingdom).
Reviews: WelshHelen (United Kingdom) (2009/01/16):
I really enjoyed this! I loved how some of the stories were intertwined but kept me guessing virtually until the end. The characters were very well drawn and I especially liked poor sad Theo. It's difficult to write any more without giving the stories away!

I'll be adding other Kate Atkinson books to my wishlist as I enjoyed this one so much and her style of writing made reading the book a pleasure.




Marianne (Australia) (2013/07/27):
Case Histories is the first book in the Jackson Brodie series by popular British author, Kate Atkinson. The background facts on several unrelated cases are presented: the disappearance of a toddler thirty-four years previous; the slaying by knife in broad daylight of a solicitor’s daughter ten years ago; the disappearance of a daughter whose mother went to jail for the murder of her father twenty-five years before; an old woman who is convinced her black cats are being abducted. PI Jackson Brodie, ex-Military Police, ex-cop, is the link between all these disparate cases. But as Jackson investigates, the lines dividing the cases begin to blur and people left behind enter each other’s stories. And it seems Jackson has an unsolved case in his own past as well. Atkinson’s format may deter some readers, as the three cases in the first chapters seem both unrelated and unfinished, but persistence is rewarded with an excellent mystery/drama that will leave the reader eager for more. Atkinson has a wonderful way with words and some of her passages are superbly evocative: “Right up until the end Victor’s mind had been as methodical as an efficient library, whereas Amelia felt hers was more like the cupboard under the stair where ancient hockey sticks were shoved beside broken hoovers and boxes of old Christmas decorations, and the one thing you knew was in there – a 5-amp fuse, a tin of tan shoe polish, a Philips screwdriver – would almost certainly be the one thing you couldn’t lay your hands on.” and vividly descriptive: “Her mad hair looked as if it had been groomed by a troupe of circus dogs.” Jackson is a very likeable character, flawed, but trying to do the right thing. Other characters are recognisable as people we encounter in our everyday lives: eccentric old women, homeless waifs, fat geezers, precocious young girls. There may be no classic denouement, but this is nonetheless a clever and funny detective story.



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