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A Cure For All Diseases (2008)

by Reginald Hill(Favorite Author)
3.98 of 5 Votes: 5
ISBN
0007252676 (ISBN13: 9780007252671)
languge
English
publisher
HarperCollinsPublishers
series
Dalziel & Pascoe
review 1: For parts of the book, the author uses the literary contrivance of showing his readers e-mail messages sent from a young lady in Yorkshire to her sister who is working as a nurse in Africa. It reads like Young Adult romance fiction with a measure of gossip. I found it unappealing.No crime is committed until 165 pages into a 477-page book. I almost quit reading the story before I got that far. It was very dull and boring. The ending is unsatisfying. The author seems to be experimenting with different literary devices, and it is unfair to readers to treat them as guinea pigs. I would not recommend this book.
review 2: To begin with, I have one confession and one warning. Reginald Hill is my absolute favourite author. I could read his shopping list and rav
... moree about it, so I have no pretence here of objectivity.Now the warning. If you have yet to read Reginald Hill’s DEATH OF DALZIEL (published in the U.S.A. under the title Death Comes for the Fat Man) then stop right now. Don’t read any further, because it is impossible to write a review of A CURE FOR ALL DISEASES without creating a spoiler for Hill’s previous Dalziel and Pascoe novel.Book Review: In the dedication of the book Reginald Hill wrote in part: To Janeites everywhere. If you’ve read Jane Austen you’ll quickly discover why. If you haven’t (like me) then it will sail over your head and it doesn’t really matter anyway. I won’t give away the reason for the dedication. It will be an extra layer for Austen fans.The story is told from the point of view of a number of characters. First and foremost is Dalziel’s conversations with “Mildred”. Charlotte’s perspective is told in the form of long, chatty (and poorly spelled) emails to her sister in Africa. Various members of the investigation team; Pascoe, Wield, Novello and Bowler also get a look-in from their perspectives.A CURE FOR ALL DISEASES also sees a shift in the dynamics of the relationship between Dalziel and Pascoe. Pascoe feels he is ready to spread his wings without Dalziel looking over his shoulder. With Pascoe in charge, Sergeant Wield is seeing a change in him. He thinks Pascoe is starting to exhibit traits that are decidedly Dalzielesque!There are some who found the emails a distraction with the poor spelling and grammar. I didn’t. I enjoyed the quirkiness of them. A CURE FOR ALL DISEASES is Reginald Hill’s twenty-third Dalziel and Pascoe novel and it is a testimony to his skill as a writer that number twenty-three is as fresh and compelling as all his others. less
Reviews (see all)
ayesha
i'd forgotten how much i like reginald hill. i wish i could remember which of his books i've read!
Melville
"An expression that made Munch's Scream look like a smiley"
angie
always love reginald hill. went on a little too long.
Debbzee
Dalziel is back! Great book and vintage Hill.
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