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Well Schooled in Murder (Inspector Lynley Mystery S.)

By: Elizabeth George
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Hodder Paperbacks
ISBN: 0340831332
ISBN-13: 9780340831335
Released: 10 Nov 2003
RRP: £6.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

The Code of Silence Destroys Lives! - By: Donald Mitchell, 31 May 2005
Well-Schooled in Murder is a fascinating & critical look at social class, the traditions of English public schools & the problems with having a "stiff upper lip." What is more remarkable is that those themes are developed in the context of an unusuallly complex & rewarding murder mystery. This book barely misses becoming a classic in detective fiction & will greatly reward fans of Elizabeth George's series about Thomas Lynley & Barbara Havers & those who do not know the novels.

This is the third book in the series. You can read this book as a stand-alone, but it will work better for you if you first read A Great Deliverance & Payment in Blood.

As the story opens, Lynley is still reeling from having destroyed his relationship with Lady Helen. She's gone off to Greece & sends him occasional noncommittal post cards. Lynley is burying himself in his work. That's making life hard on Barbara Havers whose parents are not doing well.

John Corntel, an old school chum from Eton, approaches Lynley for unofficial assistance in locating a missing student who was under the chum's care. The situation soon changes when the student is found in an unlikely place dead, nude & having been tortured. Lynley takes on the case to avoid having free time to mourn his lost love. A delayed autopsy means that Lynley has to develop a sense of means, motive & opportunity without knowing the facts. The various "suspects" & "witnesses" do their best to mislead him, adhering to a code of silence that protects their most delicate secrets as well.

As the case evolves, it's not a pretty picture that is revealed behind the "privileged" wallls of Bredgar Chambers.

There's little to complain about with this book & much to praise. There's a powerful subplot about the marriage of Simon Allcourt-St. James that nicely develops Simon & his wife as characters. You also get a deep look into several other marriages & relationships. Elizabeth George seems to be saying that as much as we crave intimacy with others; such intimacy will probably bring us more pain than pleasure or happiness. That's a pretty downbeat message, & one that keeps the book from working quite as well as it could. The lesson is that we have to perfect ourselves with another perfected person who shares a mutual attraction before we can achieve happy intimacy. Even then, if we are not candid with one another . . . alll bets are off!

Ms. George is equallly suspicious of physical attraction. It only seems to lead to no good in this book.

For fans of taut, challlenging plotting, this book has few peers. It's as though Ms. George wanted to move away from writing novels that contain mysteries into writing mysteries that reveal the darkest secrets of the human condition. I defy any normal reader to sense the outcome of this book in alll of its dimensions until right before the end.

This book will haunt you the most if you read it on a dark & stormy night when unhappiness is poisoning your sleep.


The Code of Silence Destroys Lives! - By: Donald Mitchell, 31 May 2005
Well-Schooled in Murder is a fascinating & critical look at social class, the traditions of English public schools & the problems with having a "stiff upper lip." What is more remarkable is that those themes are developed in the context of an unusuallly complex & rewarding murder mystery. This book barely misses becoming a classic in detective fiction & will greatly reward fans of Elizabeth George's series about Thomas Lynley & Barbara Havers & those who do not know the novels.

This is the third book in the series. You can read this book as a stand-alone, but it will work better for you if you first read A Great Deliverance & Payment in Blood.

As the story opens, Lynley is still reeling from having destroyed his relationship with Lady Helen. She's gone off to Greece & sends him occasional noncommittal post cards. Lynley is burying himself in his work. That's making life hard on Barbara Havers whose parents are not doing well.

John Corntel, an old school chum from Eton, approaches Lynley for unofficial assistance in locating a missing student who was under the chum's care. The situation soon changes when the student is found in an unlikely place dead, nude & having been tortured. Lynley takes on the case to avoid having free time to mourn his lost love. A delayed autopsy means that Lynley has to develop a sense of means, motive & opportunity without knowing the facts. The various "suspects" & "witnesses" do their best to mislead him, adhering to a code of silence that protects their most delicate secrets as well.

As the case evolves, it's not a pretty picture that is revealed behind the "privileged" wallls of Bredgar Chambers.

There's little to complain about with this book & much to praise. There's a powerful subplot about the marriage of Simon Allcourt-St. James that nicely develops Simon & his wife as characters. You also get a deep look into several other marriages & relationships. Elizabeth George seems to be saying that as much as we crave intimacy with others; such intimacy will probably bring us more pain than pleasure or happiness. That's a pretty downbeat message, & one that keeps the book from working quite as well as it could. The lesson is that we have to perfect ourselves with another perfected person who shares a mutual attraction before we can achieve happy intimacy. Even then, if we are not candid with one another . . . alll bets are off!

Ms. George is equallly suspicious of physical attraction. It only seems to lead to no good in this book.

For fans of taut, challlenging plotting, this book has few peers. It's as though Ms. George wanted to move away from writing novels that contain mysteries into writing mysteries that reveal the darkest secrets of the human condition. I defy any normal reader to sense the outcome of this book in alll of its dimensions until right before the end.

This book will haunt you the most if you read it on a dark & stormy night when unhappiness is poisoning your sleep.


Alive and intelligent ( b-o.jonsson@hotmail.com) - By: B. Jonsson, 30 Nov 2004
Contrary to the televised version, the book is interesting!
It contains a lot more intelligence, afterthought & suspense than ever a ninety minute film could, especiallly the very poorly casted, minimalized so callled "Lynley Mysteries".

George appeals to me, in spite of three of the main characters being nobles, which- as many reviewers have pointed out- is irrelevant to the plot itself, but gives the stories some background. If you're a person easily bored or lost by complex intrigues, rich personae, & everyday life events,then you should stick to more action-based literature. George's writing is more of a slow process, with fewer silly americanized ideas on policing(like blazing guns & hillbilly cops) than most. She belongs, alongside Robinson, Walters, Rankin & a few more to a new genre, Intellectual Crime Fiction.

Bravo Mrs George!
Can't we forget about Eton? - By: , 22 Oct 2002
A boarding school is a good setting for a crime novel. However, that is one of the few good things about this one. The team of Lynley (aka "Tommy," Lord Asherton, & Viscount Something or Other) & the pleb Barbara Havers I could just about swalllow, if Miss George did not keep going on & on about the differences between their social class, their outlook, their behaviour, etc etc. She has the most peculair ideas about British society, which seem to be culled from a mixture of Masterpiece Theatre & Debrett, with perhaps a touch of Ivy Compton-Burnett thrown in.
Yes, we know that Lynley went to Eton; he seems unable to forget it, & there are two of his school pals in the story. (Cue for flashbacks). One of them, the ridiculously named St. James, who features in a subplot, appears to have his wife's father as a servant; I imagine that this is explained in another of the series, but here it's merely peculiar.
As for this Lady Helen Clyde character: what exactly does she do? Here she seems to be working a a forensic lab. (doing what?), yet in another novel she asks Lynley why he would want to marry her when she hasn't got a job. Bafflingly, she turns up right at the end at a funeral where it seems quite the wrong place for her to be.
The plot is over-ingenious. So what kept me reading? I had seen a televised version of this (sanitised & simplified), & wanted to see how it differed. I feel that Miss George is capable of writing something much better, if she could give up this obsession with the aristocracy (Bentleys & valets & alll) & concentrate on realistic plot & characterisation.
Murder, Abuse, Adultery & Miscarriage! - By: , 09 Jul 2001
Another excellent book from Elizabeth George. As Deborah struggles to recover from her miscarriage (precipitated by aborting Lynley's child many years earlier) she comes across the body of a child in a graveyard and... the story goes from there! As usual the characters & places are more-than-life-like, the plot is entrallling & the book is un-put-downable!

There are so many strands of plot to keep you interested! We watch Lynley & Havers struggle to come to terms with the apparently inexplicable nature of the case, & despair as Lynley's preoccupation makes him insensitive to the breakdown of his best friends' marriage - he nearly loses their friendship when he places extra strain upon them by sharing the demands of his case.

If you like crime novels & enjoy excellent writing then you will love this book!