The Murder Room (Adam Dalgliesh Series #12) by P. D. James

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: November 2004
  • 432pp
  • Sales Rank: 48,806

    Reader Rating: (14 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Rainy Days" See All

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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: November 2004
    • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 432pp
    • Sales Rank: 48,806

    Synopsis

    Murders present meet murders past in P.D. James’s latest harrowing, thought-provoking thriller.

    Life imitates art. The redoubtable Commander Adam Dalgliesh is on the trail of a murderer whose MO mimics a museum exhibit. The Dupayne, a small London museum devoted to the interwar years 1919-1939, is in turmoil. As its trustees argue over whether it should be closed, one of them is murdered. Yet even as Dalgliesh investigates this mysterious killing, a second corpse is discovered. Thus paired, the two murders look uncannily similar to the crimes in the museum's "Murder Room" gallery. As Dalgliesh attempts to unravel this increasingly urgent puzzle, its complications impinge more and more upon the relationship he is developing with Emma Lavenham. And as he moves closer to a solution, he grows further from commitment to Emma.

    The New York Times

    Despite her elegiac frame of mind, Ms. James has not lost her taste for a good throttling. Nor has she ceased to remind readers of why her elaborate gamesmanship retains its value. "You should read detective fiction," someone in The Murder Room advises Commander Adam Dalgliesh, her much-admired detective. "Real-life murder today, apart from being commonplace and -- forgive me -- a little vulgar, is inhibiting of the imagination." — Janet Maslin

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    Biography

    With morality-conscious mysteries that do not linger on gore, P. D. James is a sort of anti-Lecter. Her tales are told in the whodunit tradition that prizes character, restraint and the slow unraveling of both a mystery and a social niche.

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    Customer Reviews

    Excellent writing style, multifaceted, almost literaryby Anonymous

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    October 18, 2009: This is a book you can take time with, you really get to know the characters, and the language is lovely.

    Very literary and engrossing Read.by Anonymous

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    April 23, 2009: My first P. D. James/Adam Dalgliesh novel. I already am shopping for another.


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