Every Tuesday First Chapter, First Paragraph/Intros is hosted by Vicky of I’d Rather Be at the Beach sharing the first paragraph or two of a book she’s reading or plans to read soon.
This week I’m featuring Christine Falls by Benjamin Black. Although I’m in the middle of other books right now I like to think about what to read next, often changing my mind before settling down to read the next one. Browsing my bookshelves recently (physical not virtual) this book caught my eye. I think I’ll read it soon.
She was glad it was the evening mailboat she was taking for she did not think she could have faced a morning departure. At the party the night before one of the medical students had found a flask of raw alcohol and mixed it with orange crush and she had drunk two glasses of it, and the inside of her mouth was still raw and there was something like a drum beating behind her forehead. She had stayed in bed all morning, still tipsy, unable to sleep and crying half the time, a hankie crushed to her mouth to stifle the sobs. She was frightened at the thought of what she had to do today, of what she had to undertake. Yes, she was frightened.
Blurb
Quirke’s pathology department, set deep beneath the city, is his own gloomy realm: always quiet, always night, and always under his control. Until late one evening after a party he stumbles across a body that should not be there – and his brother-in-law falsifying the corpse’s cause of death.
This is the first time Quirke has encountered Christine Falls, but the investigation he decides to lead into the way she lived and died uncovers a dark secret at the heart of Dublin’s high Catholic network; one with the power to shake his own family and everything he holds dear.
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Benjamin Black is a pseudonym used by John Banville (an author whose books I’ve enjoyed before). This is the first of his Quirke Mysteries. They are set in Ireland in the 1950s. I’ve read the fifth book, Vengeance, which I enjoyed, so when I saw this in a bookshop I bought it.
If you’ve read it I’d love to know what you thought of it. If you haven’t, does it tempt you too?
Sounds like a good series. I hadn’t heard of Banville (or Quirke) before. Thanks for sharing!
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This is an interesting series, Margaret. In my opinion, it’s got a real sense of 1950’s Dublin, which is a plus. I hope you’ll enjoy it.
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This is a series I think I’d enjoy. Thanks for sharing it. I’m off to find book 1.
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Oh, yes, the excerpt drew me right in, and now I want to find out more. Thanks for sharing.
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You had me at John Banville. I would definitely keep reading!
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I hadn’t heard of this author before (either name). It sounds like it could be good.
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I’d keep reading!
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I went to a gathering with John Banville when his “Mrs Osmond” came out. Excellent book. I had forgotten that he writes mysteries under another name. Yes, I would be eager to try it out.
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