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The Bad Quarto: An Imogen Quy Mystery
 
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The Bad Quarto: An Imogen Quy Mystery [Hardcover]

Jill Paton Walsh


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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martins Minotaur; 1 edition (April 15 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312354096
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312354091
  • Product Dimensions: 21.1 x 13.7 x 2.5 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 363 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #892,708 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. British author Walsh, praised for her seamless work completing two posthumous works by Dorothy Sayers (the Lord Peter Wimsey mysteries Thrones, Dominations and A Presumption of Death), demonstrates her mastery of the modern academic mystery with her fourth whodunit (after 2006's Debts of Dishonor) featuring nurse Imogen Quy, who serves unobtrusively but effectively at the fictional St. Agatha's College of Cambridge University. Quy witnesses the final moments of John Talentire, a college fellow who topples to his death while daredevil climbing a building. The death appears to be an accident until one of Talentire's friends uses an amateur staging of Hamlet—the obscure, shorter version known as the Bad Quarto—to dramatically imply that another fellow murdered Talentire by untying his safety rope. Quy sleuths amid the vicious world of modern Shakespearean scholarship to put the pieces together in a manner that would do Harriet Vane proud. Both Sayers fans and lovers of traditional fair play should embrace this excellent read. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Promising research fellow John Talentire dies while attempting to jump between two buildings at Cambridge University, a stunt otherwise known as Harding's Folly. Imogen Quy, college nurse at St. Agatha's College, Cambridge, launches her own investigation months later, after a friend of Talentire's insists that the researcher was murdered and accuses a faculty member of the crime. The principal characters are involved in a production of The Bad Quarto of Hamlet put on by a student theater company, which gives veteran author Walsh a chance to combine elements of two subgenres: the academic mystery and the backstage mystery. Along with her amateur sleuthing, the tenderhearted Imogen also spends time taking care of an elderly fellow of St. Agatha's and searching for a missing scholarship student. The threads of all three plots tie together nicely in the end. Imogen is a well-delineated main character, and the typical academic ambience is freshened considerably with the bizarre facts behind the risky business of climbing college buildings for sport. Sue O'Brien
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Amazon.com: 4.2 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars "Murder most foul.", April 28 2007
By E. Bukowsky "booklover10" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Bad Quarto: An Imogen Quy Mystery (Hardcover)
In Jill Paton Walsh's "The Bad Quarto," Imogen Quy, the resident nurse and a fellow of St. Agatha's College, Cambridge, becomes embroiled in academic politics and a case of "murder most foul." The victim is research fellow John Talentire, a provocative teacher whose death had originally been ruled accidental. After a night of drinking, Talentire had attempted to jump a gap known as Harding's Folly, a feat that had taken the lives of other daredevils before him. It seems that risking one's life climbing monuments of Cambridge architecture has been a tradition of long standing. There are those who believe that Talentire was too experienced a climber to have fallen to his death. It is possible that someone who held a grudge against him may have precipitated his fatal fall.

Meanwhile, Imogen's lodger, Frances Bullion, belongs to a university dramatic society known as the Kyd Players. The Players have an emergency committee meeting in Imogen's living room to plan strategy, since they are in danger of imminent bankruptcy. Their only hope is to stage a production of Hamlet (a shortened version known as the Bad Quarto) to be funded by a wealthy young man named Martin Mottle. The catch? Mottle, a man with no acting experience, will play Hamlet. At the risk of making themselves a laughingstock, the Kyd Players accept Mottle's offer. Little do they know that this young man has his own secret plans for the forthcoming production.

Imogen Quy is a gentle, intelligent, and extremely curious individual who thinks nothing of nosing into other people's lives. She is a talented amateur sleuth whose sharp eyes and keen mind miss very little. Her responsibilities as a college nurse range from tending to her students' minor physical ailments to handling their emotional ups and downs. For example, Imogen attempts to calm the nervous Samantha Barton, a young woman who is terrified that she will do poorly on her upcoming English exam. On a more serious note, the nurse decides to conduct her own inquiries into the circumstances surrounding John Talentire's untimely death.

Walsh's lively cast of characters include a washed up alcoholic actor named Gadgby, who can still recite Shakespeare with panache, Susan Inchman, a student who enrolled in Cambridge after spending much of her tragic childhood in foster homes, and Dr. Percy Venton-Gimps, an arrogant scholar with an almost irrational loathing for Shakespeare. "The Bad Quarto" is thoughtful and charming, with lovely descriptive writing, dry humor, and a satisfying plot that will please aficionados of literate British mysteries.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Night climbers, July 23 2007
By Beverley Strong - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Bad Quarto: An Imogen Quy Mystery (Hardcover)
"Night Climbers" is the term given to students who climb and clamber all over the roofs and ledges of the colleges at Cambridge university, risking life and limb and unfortunately, sometimes coming to grief because of bravado and youthful stupidity. Imogen Quy is the resident nurse at St.Agatha's, one of the colleges and is an amateur sleuth who likes to keep her finger on the pulse of student life. When a young professor is killed while attempting a climb, one of his friends protests that it was really murder and tries to shock the murderer into revealing himself by virtually accusing him in a short version of Hamlet, known as The Bad Quarto, played by the University players. I enjoyed all the descriptions of the surrounds of the college and of the scenery of the nearby fens but, on the whole, found this book to be rather dull and not at all gripping. Other readers seem to enjoy the series featuring Imogen Quy...perhaps this wasn't one of the better ones.

2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars wonderful amateur sleuth academic whodunit, April 21 2007
By Harriet Klausner - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Bad Quarto: An Imogen Quy Mystery (Hardcover)
Imogen Quy serves as an effective college nurse at St. Agatha's College, Cambridge University. However, her serene academic world is shook just as she is about to bike home for the evening. A stunned student calls for her assistance. She finds college fellow John Talentire dying with her realizing it is too late for him as blood pours everywhere. Apparently following what the locals dub Harding's Folly from a previous human dive, John fell off the side of a tower that he was climbing.

At a BAD QUARTO production of Hamlet, the Kyd Society players imply that Talentire, a Shakespearean researcher was murdered when his rope was loosened. Unable to neither mind her business nor forget the sight of all the blood as John died, Imogen quietly makes inquiries to what has been officially considered a tragic foolish accident only to find the Shakespearean scholars being Lady Macbeth stock that has the Bard turning over in his grave.

Using the shortened Hamlet as a reason to investigate, Jill Paton Walsh provides the audience with a wonderful amateur sleuth academic whodunit. The scholars are quite a crew with Imogen realizing any of them seem capable of unethical behavior yet pondering who would kill to do so as she is convinced someone murdered Talentire. Imogen keeps the tale focused as a magnificent central character whose investigation provides a spotlight on the backstabbing rival fellows. (See DEBTS OF DISHONOR).

Harriet Klausner
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 5 reviews  4.2 out of 5 stars 

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