I’ve been reading quite a few long books recently and fancied something shorter, and more amusing. I also noticed that I’ve not been reading much crime fiction lately, so I looked at my bookshelves and took down Much in Evidence by Henry Cecil (published in the US as The Long Arm). My copy is a secondhand book, with this great cover.
To summarise the plot very briefly – Mr Richmond, bald and lame was attacked in his home and robbed of £100,000. The insurance company reluctantly paid up, but then they discover that a series of bald, lame men had been making dubious claims on insurance companies and he is charged with fraud.
Coincidences abound in this book, until you just don’t know what to believe. Is there just once coincidence too many … ? It was with relief that I read the last chapter, where my suspicions were confirmed.
My rating: 4/5
Details of a new copy of Much in Evidence (from Amazon UK):
- Paperback: 212 pages
- Publisher: House of Stratus; New edition edition (16 Oct 2000)
- Language English
- ISBN-10: 1842320572
- ISBN-13: 978-1842320570
Margaret – Oh, this does sound like a fun, light read. I’m not usually one to be fond of an overabundance of coincidences, but this one really does sound like a nice, light break from heavier reading.
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I love those old school Penguin covers. They make me feel like a rainy day with tea and scones.
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