Moving Toyshop

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Edmund Crispin: Moving Toyshop (Hardcover, 1988, Amereon Limited)

Hardcover, 204 pages

English language

Published Sept. 21, 1988 by Amereon Limited.

ISBN:
978-0-8488-0104-5
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Named by P.D. James as one of the best five mysteries of all time.

Richard Cadogan is at loose ends in Oxford, very late at night. Charmed by the window display of an old-fashioned toyshop, he is worried to find the door unlocked; surely the owner should be alerted. And so Cadogan slips into the darkened store and up the narrow stairway to the apartment above. But rather than a snoring toyman, he finds a very dead old lady, the marks of murder still livid on her neck. But when Cadogan returns with the coppers, the toyshop...has disappeared. This, it seems, is a matter for Gervase Fen.

18 editions

reviewed The Moving Toyshop by Edmund Crispin (Penguin classic crime)

Review of 'The Moving Toyshop' on 'Goodreads'

This was the first of Crispin's Fen novels that I read, about eight years ago. I didn't love it, but I didn't hate it either. I do like Golden Age crime novels, and I thought there was enough there to give his other books a try - and when I read them, I liked them more than I liked this one.

It's a good job I didn't try that exercise now, because re-reading it this week was painful. I don't know whether another eight years of reading Golden Age mysteries has refined my sensibilities, or whether this caught me on a bad week, but I hated it this time round. I found it far too full of itself, loathed the way that the fourth wall was broken, found Fen unbearable as a character, and thought the plot was just ludicrous.

And now I'm not sure whether I want to re-read …

Subjects

  • Mystery & Detective - Traditional British
  • Fiction
  • Fiction - Mystery/ Detective
  • Mystery/Suspense
  • Mystery & Detective - General