Picture of author.

Mark Douglas-Home

Autor(a) de The Sea Detective

8 Works 356 Membros 23 Reviews

Séries

Obras de Mark Douglas-Home

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Data de nascimento
1951-08-31
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
UK
Locais de residência
Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
Educação
Eton College
University of the Witwatersrand
Ocupação
journalist
author

Membros

Resenhas

Good writing and one wanted to read on, but the set-up is rather contrived, with a whole village, community and history invented by the author to establish a basis for the story and characters. To a great extent the main characters have also had to be 'invented' - "a unique investigator and oceanographer". This approach, customary in science fiction, seems odd for a tale about otherwise believable characters set in an otherwise 'real today' context.
 
Marcado
NaggedMan | outras 5 resenhas | Jan 12, 2023 |
I must admit, I thought the front cover of this book was horrible and, unfortunately, the actual story wasn't much better. I hated how police officer, Helen Jamison, was mocked by both her female and male colleagues because she was a size 18 and not covergirl pretty, regardless of the fact she was highly intelligent and capable. This really disgusted me.

Cal McGill was a rather bland main character although I did enjoy the mystery surrounding his grandfather's death and his knowledge of the tides was interesting. However, the plot was slow with little action so I found it a slog to finish. I was glad when I reached the last page and was thrilled that Helen got her revenge!… (mais)
 
Marcado
HeatherLINC | outras 10 resenhas | Aug 3, 2020 |
The `sea detective' seems a curiously secondary character in this second novel in the series which bears his name. But I suppose this allows the author to bring a wider variety of protagonists to the fore.

In this proper novel of character and theme, justice is done (if not - quite - seen to be done): the good end happily(-ish), the bad unhappily.
 
Marcado
jtck121166 | outras 5 resenhas | Jun 9, 2020 |
Cal McGill's full first name is Caladh which is Gaelic for a harbor or haven, and many people have come to him hoping he will end their nightmares and find their missing loved ones. With his exhaustive knowledge of winds and tides and his far-flung network of contacts, he's been very successful, and I hope he continues to be because Mark Douglas-Home's series is one of my very favorites.

As Cal begins his search for Kate's missing sister, he's also faced with the death of his best friend, Alex, and this leads to much introspection. Cal has always been a loner: he "experienced the closest he ever came to elation. He was on a wild coast alone and no one knew where he was." I can identify with this aspect of his nature, but I'm also aware of its downside. "Was he becoming more solitary in his habits, too comfortable in his own company and silence?" Cal has to work this through while he searches for Flora.

The Driftwood Girls is several stories woven skillfully together. There's Cal's soul-searching after the death of his friend. There's the search for Flora Tolmie. There's the rather strange story of three people living on an island off the coast of the Netherlands. And there's the slowly unfolding story of what happened to Kate and Flora's mother twenty-three years ago. The book could actually be considered a study in the different ways people respond to grief and this overlying sadness-- as well as Cal's feeling of being cut off from the world-- may make it a bit difficult for readers to be drawn into the story.

The knowledge that goes into making Cal the sea detective is fascinating but never overwhelms the story, and the author's descriptions of coastal areas of Scotland and the Netherlands can have even the most hardened landlubber smelling the salt air, hearing the cry of gulls, and wanting to set sail. The only thing that I can quibble over is how neatly the story of Kate and Flora's mother was wrapped up. It all seemed a bit too convenient, just a bit contrived, but it certainly didn't keep me from enjoying the book.

The oceans, tides, and winds, the atmospheric descriptions of land and sea, the characters, and the stories all mesh perfectly into mysteries that I love to sink into. If you love stories like this, then you need to become acquainted with Cal McGill. Start with The Sea Detective, and be prepared to get your hands on all the others.
… (mais)
½
 
Marcado
cathyskye | Feb 2, 2020 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
8
Membros
356
Popularidade
#67,310
Avaliação
3.9
Resenhas
23
ISBNs
35
Idiomas
3

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