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The Sinking Admiral

By: The Detection Club, Simon Brett - editor
Narrated by: Tom Clegg
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Publisher's Summary

The Floating Admiral was the first of the Detection Club's collaborative novels, in which 12 of its members wrote a single novel. Eighty-five years later, 14 members of the club have once again collaborated to produce The Sinking Admiral.

The Admiral is a pub in the Suffolk seaside village of Crabwell, the Admiral Byng. The Admiral is also the nickname of its landlord, Geoffrey Horatio Fitzsimmons, as well as the name of the landlord's dinghy. None of them are as buoyant as they should be, for the pub is threatened with closure due to falling takings.

Tempers are already frayed due to the arrival of a television documentary team when Fitzsimmons is found dead in his tethered boat. The villagers assume a simple case of suicide and fear that their debt-ridden pub will now sink without a trace.

The journalists seem determined to finish the job by raking up old skeletons, but they weren't banking on the fact that this story has been written by 14 extremely competitive crime writers - arch bamboozlers who will stop at nothing to save a good pub.

The Sinking Admiral, edited by the Detection Club's outgoing president - author and broadcaster Simon Brett, OBE - continues a tradition established by the Detection Club's founders in 1931, when Dorothy L. Sayers, Agatha Christie, Freeman Wills Crofts and 11 other esteemed authors wrote The Floating Admiral, a collaborative novel, to challenge themselves, fox their audience and help to pay for the club's running costs.

Now, 85 years later, 14 of today's leading crime writers have repeated this unique game of literary consequences, producing an original, ebullient and archetypal whodunit that will keep listeners guessing right up to what crime lovers insist on calling the dénouement.

The contributors to The Sinking Admiral are: Simon Brett, Kate Charles, Natasha Cooper, Stella Duffy, Martin Edwards, Ruth Dudley Edwards, Tim Heald, Michael Jecks, Janet Laurence, Peter Lovesey, Michael Ridpath, David Roberts, L. C. Tyler and Laura Wilson, all members of the Detection Club.

©2016 The Detection Club (P)2016 HarperCollins Publishers Limited

Critic Reviews

Reviews for previous Detection Club reissues: "A must for all connoisseurs of detective fiction." ( Literary Review)
"This year's most welcome reissue." ( Sunday Telegraph)
"A book of irresistible charm for students of the detective story." ( Times Literary Supplement)

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Don't bother

Apparently I started this book approximately 9-10 months ago. I kept going out of sheer determination. I LOVED the Floating Admiral. The sense of play the writers had in making each chapter their own. This is completely different. It is one consistent story. It is long and tedious. Lots of red herrings and random information. Too many characters so that none of them feel particularly real. I think the narrator's accent put me off - he sounded (to my ears) a little like the smarmy television guy that he often voiced and I found the association stuck in my perception. The only sense of fun was in the final chapter where various golden-age names are bantered around, for no particular purpose except to pay homage. It was a nice touch, but where The Floating Admiral had that sense of fun all the way through, the Sinking Admiral was ... lacking in fun and took itself too seriously. The characters were too serious. The story may have been okay if it was shorter ... and if it wasn't in any way associated (even by title) with the earlier collaboration.

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