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review 2016-10-05 00:40
Masterpost: The Grantchester Mysteries (Books 1-5)
Sidney Chambers and the Shadow of Death - James Runcie
Sidney Chambers and the Problem of Evil - James Runcie
Sidney Chambers and the Perils of the Night - James Runcie
Sidney Chambers and The Forgiveness of Sins - James Runcie
Sidney Chambers and The Dangers of Temptation (Grantchester) - James Runcie

I kept seeing advertisements for a series on the BBC called Grantchester which is all about a vicar who is a part-time detective. After watching the first season, I knew that I needed to read the books that inspired the show. I waited until I made my way through all the ones that are currently out so I could do a masterpost with my review of the series as a whole. Let's do this!

 

Word on the street (Wikipedia) is that the author, James Runcie, only has one more book planned for this series so this is a great time to get caught up before its release. Each book includes several mysteries other than the one which gives the book its title. It follows Sidney Chambers right after the end of WWII when he has recently become the vicar of Grantchester. Right from the start the reader is made aware that Sidney is not your typical man of the cloth. For one thing, he enjoys whiskey at the pub with his friend Geordie who is a police detective. For another he is massive fan of jazz and sees nothing wrong with going to a boozy club on his day off to enjoy the sultry songs (and the singers). He is also struggling between two opposing sides of his personality because Sidney is a part-time sleuth. The theme running throughout all of the books is this push-and-pull between what Sidney believes is his duty to his flock and his yearning to be where the action is. He justifies his actions as a detective by saying that as a clergyman it is his duty to involved in the lives of his parishioners. It's a shaky argument which pretty much everyone points out to him. Runcie makes some considerable leaps through time between some of the stories so be prepared for that. I found it somewhat jarring because I'm used to mystery series such as Agatha Christie's where the characters can feel like they're living in a bubble. If I had to complain about anything from this series it would probably be that the tone borders on being sanctimonious at times which I felt didn't track with how I viewed the character and so it didn't fit as the tone for the narrative. However, if you want to get outside of your head and sit back with a mystery on a cold night this winter then I recommend you give Runcie's Grantchester Mysteries a shot.

 

The books in the series:

  1. Sidney Chambers and the Shadow of Death
  2.  
  3. Sidney Chambers and The Perils of the Night
  4.  
  5. Sidney Chambers and The Problem of Evil
  6.  
  7. Sidney Chambers and The Forgiveness of Sins
  8.  
  9. Sidney Chambers and The Dangers of Temptation
Source: readingfortheheckofit.blogspot.com
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review 2016-09-03 19:01
College mayhem
Grantchester Grind - Tom Sharpe

A chronicle of Porterhouse College, Cambridge, the acidly-Sharpe humour served up by the author is as sumptuous as a fellows feast. Dripping with hysterical characters, the book plots the chaotic attempts to spare the ancient institution from financial ruin, led by a coterie of dysfunctional men marooned in a glorious past, which is slowly and painfully being eroded. The Master (Skullion), formerly the Head Porter, the Dean, Senior Tutor, Bursar and Praelector conspire and scheme and cross metaphorical swords with a media magnate and gangster for the greater good of Porterhouse. The Machiavellian plot twists unstintingly with laugh-out-loud moments sprinkled throughout. Tom Sharpe is rightly regarded as a great post-Waugh humorist and guardian of the national funny bone. Very highly recommended.

Source: www.goodreads.com/review/show/1521148923
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photo 2015-03-02 20:08

So, I got this in the mail today. And I totally admit to being shallow and choosing the cover that has James Norton on it, because look at him. (Also, The Book Depository gave me a bookmark! I love it when they do that.)

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photo 2015-02-12 18:50

Double-checked my mailbox when I got home now. Apparently there were mail to me today! Now is just the question when I will have time to read the book?

 

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text 2015-02-01 16:25
Grantchester

Started watching Grantchester last night, marvelous series! Today I was very close to buying the first book that the show is based of, but I came to my senses since I proably won't have time to read it until 2016. 

 

But anyway, watch it if you like English crime series! Or just watch it for the gorgeous James Norton! Doesn't he look like a young Robert Redford? 

 

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