Kissing the Gunner's Daughter
Written by Ruth Rendell
Narrated by Davina Porter
3.5/5
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About this audiobook
Ruth Rendell
Ruth Rendell (1930–2015) won three Edgar Awards, the highest accolade from Mystery Writers of America, as well as four Gold Daggers and a Diamond Dagger for outstanding contribution to the genre from England’s prestigious Crime Writers’ Association. Her remarkable career spanned a half century, with more than sixty books published. A member of the House of Lords, she was one of the great literary figures of our time.
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Reviews for Kissing the Gunner's Daughter
153 ratings8 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/53.5 Stars This book was just slow for me for some reason. I had a hard time concentrating. It was just boring. Im not sure why??
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In Kissing the Gunner's Daughter, long-time supporting character Sergeant Martin gets a first name. His adventure in chapter one might have been the author's argument against arming British police officers. I feel very sorry for his young son.There's a new addition to the Kingsmarkham police force: Detective Barry Vine (named for Ms. Rendell's nom de plume, Barbara Vine?). He's a good man and Wexford appreciates his work. Does that make up for the fact that Reg is again stuck with the pathologist he doesn't want around instead of the one he respects?Dr. Basil Sumner-Quist doesn't even come close to vexing Reg as much as his favorite daughter, Sheila. Another book that came out the same year as this book was Maybe He's Just a Jerk by Carol Rosen. It would have been a suitable gift for Sheila, especially with a bookmark in the right chapter. Reg would have had to send it anonymously. Sheila won't hear a word against her new man. Dora has more patience with writer Augustine Carey than Reg has. Perhaps she would be as apprehensive for their daughter as her husband is if she'd read the book. Besides setting off jerk alarm bells, Sheila's new love struck me as an 'Emperor's New Clothes' author: praised because critics and readers are afraid to admit they don't understand his books. I suspect that's because they're rubbish. Another writer has been murdered, along with her husband and daughter. The granddaughter manages to make it to the phone and get help in time to avoid bleeding to death.It's a frustrating case. The employees' houses are too far away from the main house for them to have heard the gunshots. All the houses are in a wood that combines new growth with ancient. Daisy, as the granddaughter is called, gives a description of the masked man who shot her. It resembles one of the few suspects, a respectable young man.As usual, there are more than enough false trails Wexford and the readers get led down. Two persons were responsible for that bloody night. One of them was easy to figure out, but the other took me by surprise. I wish that Ms. Rendell had bothered to include Sylvia's married surname in this book. Her husband and father-in-law have cameo roles, so there was opportunity for that. (If it was mentioned in one of the earlier books, I don't remember.) The descriptions of Tancred House, where the murders take place, and the surrounding Cheriton forest are beautiful -- aside from the actual murders. Squeamish readers would probably have preferred less details there. I'm afraid we have to wait until chapter 27 to find out where the title comes from, but it's an interesting expression.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Reg Wexford (described pompously on the cover of the US edition as "Inspector Reginald Wexford", f'r gawd's sake, as if they were hoping to make you think he was another goddam Brit cop-with-a-knighthood, or at least an "Hon" to put to his name) has to tackle one of the goriest cases of his career, when an internationally renowned local author has her head blown apart by a gunman or gunmen who also slay her husband and daughter; only her granddaughter Daisy survives. Doing his usual bluff best to tread the path of goodness while yet solving the crime as efficiently as possible, and trying to cope at the same time with his increasing estrangement from his daughter over her latest disastrous choice of lovers, Reg Wexford pushes aside countless red herrings until finally the solution becomes obvious. I got there a little ahead of him, in fact, which means either that I am Very Very Clever or that, years ago, I saw the British TV adaptation (with the great George Baker), even though I have no memory of having done so. It's ironic that, Rendell having made her name with the Wexford books, these now seem among the lesser of her books; at the same time, they can sometimes, depending upon my mood, seem more approachable than her psychological thrillers. I enjoyed this one more than the past few Wexfords I've read. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Our story opens with two chapters that may be considered a prologue. By an inconsequential series of events, a bank robbery goes bad and a policeman is killed.Chapter 3 opens eight months later with the very bolldy murder of a family and the severe wounding of the youngest family member. Celebrity author and general pain Davina Flory, her husband, former M.P. Harvey Copeland, and her daughter Naomi ahve been fatally shot, while graddaughter Daisy has been seriously wounded.Who wanted to kill this family, and why? What is the connection, if any, between the bank robbery and the "Tancred Massacre"?As always, author Rendell uses Inspector Wexford's intelligence and sensitivity to explore the hidden emotions driving the action. This is a serious and well-done character study.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Another terrific mystery plus from Ruth Rendell, chock full of interesting characters, absorbing plot twists, lucid prose and lovely little extra bits (ah, the famous novelist).
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5An excellent whodunnit, and one of the more gory murder scenes that Wexford has encountered - if you like that sort of thing.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The first Rendell book I ever read, and it was all together different from what I was expecting. I thought it was going be a shoot-em up and it turned out a delightful mystery with a Wexford detective that I really liked and I liked Burden as well.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Pedestrian murder investigation. The literate Chief inspecter Wexford gets notified of a 999 call from a young girl claiming "they are all dead, I think I'm going to die too, hurry before I blead to death" and that's about all the excitement in this book. He and his team arrive at "Tanscay" the home of a rich literary authoress who with her husband, and daughter have all been shot. The granddaughter Daisy Flory, also shot but still alive is rushed to hospital. What follows is plodding and dull investigation where Wexford speaks to a few of the people who live on the estate, and four weeks pass without anything notable happening. Quite how the 4 or 5 people he speaks to manage to fill 4 weeks is unclear. Some of this time is interspersed with Wexford's family issues. these may once have been of interest to readers who have been following Wexford's career, but they are at best distracting, and mostly dull for the casual reader. There is a while when you are hoping that the new boyfriend will be implicated in the murder plot simply ot liven things up, but alas this doesn't come to pass. The Blurb on the back says "not an unecessary word" but along with all the other faulty praise this is wrong too. There are long paragrpahs of pretentious descriptions of the woodlands, that do nothign to move the plot along, and fail to move the spirit either. Some of the characterisation of Daisy is not too bad, and Wexford's interaction with his subordinates is also reasonable but overal not an entertaining read, nor a particularly well written book, though the ending is reasonably well contrived. Speaking of contrived, the book's odd title is explained part way thorugh, though it has little if any bearing on the plot.