User:GWhitewood/in progress
Example of Info box:
Author | Russell T. Davies |
---|---|
Series | Doctor Who book: Virgin New Adventures |
Release number | 55 |
Subject | Featuring: Seventh Doctor Chris, Roz |
Set in | Period between The Death of Art and So Vile a Sin |
Publisher | Virgin Books |
Publication date | October 1996 |
ISBN | 0-426-20483-2 |
Preceded by | The Death of Art |
Followed by | Bad Therapy (publication) |
{/{infobox Book |
| name = The Weight of Water
| title_orig =
| translator =
| image = Image:WeightofWaterbookcover.jpg
| image_caption = First edition cover
| author = Anita Shreve
| illustrator =
| cover_artist =
| country = United States
| language = English
| series =
| genre = Historical fiction
| publisher = Little, Brown and Company
| release_date = January 1, 1997
| english_release_date =
| media_type = Print (Hardcover and Paperback)
| pages = 256 pp
| isbn = 0316789976
| preceded_by =
| followed_by =
}/}
Authors/fiction
[edit]4 June 2007: Created article on Charles Todd, Caroline and Charles Todd mystery authors, also a disambiguation page for each name. Plot information retained for further consideration.
Their first book A Test of Wills (1996) was described by the New York Times Book Review as "A harrowing psychological drama…SUPERB". In a Warwickshire village, a popular retired military officer has been murdered, and the chief suspect is, unhappily for the Inspector, a much-decorated war hero and a friend of the Prince of Wales. Nominated for the John Creasey Award in the UK; other nominations are the Edgar Award, an Anthony and the Independent Mystery Booksellers Association Dilys Award. The Todds won the Barry Gardiner Award from the Deadly Pleasures Mystery Magazine . The Independent Mystery Booksellers Association listed A Test of Wills one of the 100 favorite mysteries of the 20th Century. It received a starred review in Publishers Weekly and was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year.
Wings of Fire (1998) also received a nomination for the Independent Mystery Booksellers Association Dilys Award and was short listed for first Ellis Peters Mystery Award in the UK. Again The New York Times selected it as a Notable Book of the Year. The Library Journal described, WINGS OF FIRE as "Rich and beautifully nuanced". Rutledge is sent to Cornwall, England, where three members of the same family have died under suspicious circumstances. Among the dead is Olivia Marlowe, the reclusive writer whose war poetry gave Ian Rutledge a handhold on sanity while he fought in the trenches of France. O. A. Manning's poems continue to be a theme in the series.
Search the Dark (1999) finds Rutledge in a small Dorset town to locate two missing children. The body of a woman, assumed to be their mother, has been found. Are the children also victims of a vicious killer? Or is there another, more political, reason for murder? Winner of the 1999 Reviewers Choice Award from the Romantic Times Magazine, The Washington Post Book World said, "Todd's Ian Rutledge mysteries are among the most intelligent and affecting being written these days".
Legacy of the Dead (2000) earned the Todd's their third The New York Times Notable book listing. This time Rutledge's superior dispatches him to Durham to question the mother of a missing young woman. The weathered remains found on a windswept Scottish mountainside may be those of her daughter, Eleanor Gray. And the killer may be someone close to Hamish. Publishers Weekly in their review of LEGACY OF THE DEAD, wrote, "Readers will continue to be captivated by Todd's portrait of the dangerously unraveling detective, and his equally incisive evocation of the grieving post-war world".
Watchers of Time (2001) is set in Osterley, a marshy Norfolk backwater. A man lies dying on a stormy autumn night. But while natural causes will claim Herbert Baker's life in a matter of hours, his last request baffles his family--why has he, a devout Protestant, demanded to see a Catholic priest for his last confession? Within a week the priest will follow him to the grave, victim of an appalling murder that opens floodgates of suspicion and dangerous secrets. According to the Washington Post Book World, Watchers of Time is "One of the best historical series being written today…in the grand tradition of English murder mysteries".
A Fearsome Doubt (2002) was reviewed by the New York Times Book Review, writing, "Todd raises the stakes in this series to new and nearly unbearable levels". Bantam Books noted that "Best-selling author Charles Todd has earned a special place among mystery's elite writers with his acclaimed series featuring Scotland Yard Inspector Ian Rutledge, a former soldier seeking to lay to rest the demons of his past in the aftermath of World War I. But that past bleeds into the present in a complex murder case that calls into question his own honor...and the crimes committed in the name of God, country, and righteous vengeance".
The Murder Stone (2003) is a stand-alone novel, and not a part of the Rutledge Series. It is centered on the home front in 1916, as the Great War still rages. Francesca Hatton's beloved grandfather dies on the family estate in England's isolated Exe Valley after the last of his grandsons is killed on the Somme. Before she can grieve for the man who raised her, Francesca is stunned to find an unsigned letter among his effects, cursing the Hattons and their descendants. Now a stranger has shown up on her doorstep, accusing her grandfather of being a murderer. "Family upheaval intensified by wartime tragedy,” wrote Kirkus Reviews. Francesca, like so many women of her time, is forced to develop the strength and the courage of the men who are no longer there.
A Cold Treachery (2005) received a Publishers Weekly: Starred Review. "Traditional mystery lovers who prefer their whodunits enriched with psychological insight will heartily embrace Todd's seventh Inspector Rutledge novel". The New York Times: "The tragic sweep of Charles Todd's historical mysteries grows more expansive with each successive novel in his stunning series". December 1919 violence, near the rustic Lake District town of Urskdale, has left Gerald and Grace Elcott and three of their progeny shot to death. A fourth child, 10-year-old Josh Robinson, is nowhere to be found. He's thought to have fled from the scene, only to have perished in a the blizzard. Desperate for clues, and with his impatient superior threatening to replace him on this case, Rutledge must find who, or what, was behind this carnage.
{/{hndis|name=Todd, Charles}/}