Vera the crow trap mp4 download
It is also the first book in the Vera Stanhope detective series. Before I had even finished this book, I ordered the seco I had read many good reviews about this author, so being a lover of British mysteries, I decided to give her book a try. Before I had even finished this book, I ordered the second one in the series, Telling Tales, from amazon. I can't wait to read it. While I'm waiting for it to be delivered, I'll have to content myself with other authors.
Prior to this book, I had read novels by various Scandinavian authors. I found that these books were too dark and depressing for me. If you enjoy interesting characters, and a good puzzle all wrapped up neatly in the end, then you will find this an enjoyable crime novel. This is the best new author I have read in the last 5 years. I'm surprised that it took so long for me to find her! View all 6 comments. Nov 16, Emma rated it really liked it. I enjoyed this book. I watched Vera on tv a few years ago and enjoyed that too.
I enjoyed the different POVs of the 4 women. It did seem a bit too long especially in the central section, not that it put me off. Will probably continue with the series at some point. What a drag this book was! I have fallen in love with the tv series starring Brenda Blethyn and I was so excited to start a new mystery series. Now of course I am wondering if I should even bother with the second book in the series, "Telling Tales. Instead we focus on three women and go back and forth What a drag this book was!
Instead we focus on three women and go back and forth between two of the women after one of them is murdered.
I have to say the final reveal of who is behind the murders that popped up in this book and why were a bit hard to take. I didn't feel like any of the characters were very well developed besides the three women the book decides to focus the most on anyway.
These three women are in Northumberland in order to do an environmental survey. There is a possibly quarry that may be built and there are sides for it and against it. When a local farmer's wife commits suicide, it seems to be the catalyst that causes everyone else to realize that maybe something else is going on here.
When one of these three women is found murdered, DI Vera Stanhope appears on scene and decides to lay a trap to catch the murderer.
Eh if I have to pick one woman that didn't drive me up the wall, it would be no one. Rachel was aggravating, Anne and her personal life.. And Grace's was the most interesting to me, but I honestly had a hard time with that character cause we pretty much skipped over why she was on the survey team until almost the end. I didn't get it myself based on what we found out about her and her real family since it didn't feel like something her father would really care about.
It just came out of nowhere. Vera was a loudmouth who I had to question her intelligence at times. She didn't seem that bright until the book pivoted to her POV. And even then I don't know. She is not acting how the tv show Vera acts. There seems to be no subtlety at all.
There are other characters in this one, but I refuse to go back and look them up. I just didn't find them that intriguing. The writing was okay, this book was way too long. The flow as up and down. Going from Rachel, Anne, and Grace and showcasing the same timeline via different POVs made me want to pull my hair out. I started to become bored while reading this. You start to wonder what is going on and how is it all connected.
The ending didn't make a lot of sense to me. I felt like it just came out of nowhere. I had to re-read that part a few times to even get the gist of what is happening. And you don't even get a good sense of closure. The book just abruptly ends. Recently she read this book and recommended it to me, so I decided to check out the audiobook from my local library.
As you can tell by my rating, it was not a winner. What the hell? I was here for Vera! Dec 29, Noeleen rated it really liked it. If you enjoy English murder mysteries, this is an extremely well written, engaging read and a great start to the series. Although over pages long, it doesn't feel like it as the writing reads easily an The Crow Trap is the first in the Vera Stanhope series by Ann Cleeves and one of the books in the series that the hugely popular ITV television show Vera is based upon.
Although over pages long, it doesn't feel like it as the writing reads easily and the story flows along nicely. Vera doesn't appear until about two thirds the way through the book but she is definitely worth the wait! I love the normality of her character, her straight talking, no-nonsense approach to everything. I was definitely second guessing who the murderer was all of the way through and still never got it right!
Full of interesting and varied characters with absorbing back stories, lots of red herrings and ultimately beautiful descriptions of the North East of England, this is an ideal English murder mystery which kept me wanting to keep reading on until the end. I have since bought all the books in the series. Loved it! View 2 comments.
This is the first Vera Stanhope novel. It took a long time to get the the point when Stanhope enters the story which is my reason for 4 stars. There are characters who hide their past and even their identity. There is an early suicide which leads Vera to investigate hidden links between characters. Vera's backstory in the book varies somewhat from the TV series. And although she is not a fash This is the first Vera Stanhope novel. And although she is not a fashion plate on TV, she is described in a way in the book which makes her sound like she could be mistaken for someone who is homeless, and living on the street.
The audiobook is pleasantly narrated by Anne Dover. I can't comment on the accuracy of the accent. I have a friend who lives in Northern England and finds the accent of the TV character, Vera Stanhope, quite inaccurate. I'm venture a guess that there is quite a lot of variation in accents in the region. Living in Boston for many years, I found there were many differences from neighborhood to neighborhood. Apr 02, Rachel Hall rated it it was amazing Shelves: no.
The Crow Trap has the indomitable Detective Inspector Vera Stanhope in fine fettle, once against unsettling all and sundry in her presence. Although it is not until over two-hundred-pages into the novel that she becomes known to the guests at remote Baikie Cottage, bringing with her a brash demeanour and distinctly unfeminine appearance, she more than makes up for her late entrance. Originally published in , this is a timeless case with a host of suspects confusing matters and keeping reader The Crow Trap has the indomitable Detective Inspector Vera Stanhope in fine fettle, once against unsettling all and sundry in her presence.
Originally published in , this is a timeless case with a host of suspects confusing matters and keeping readers on their toes! Baikie's Cottage is the property of a charitable trust left by illustrator and spinster, Constance Baikie, in order to encourage environmental education and research and is the admittedly basic accommodation that plays host to the ensuing mystery.
In The Crow Trap Vera is reunited with the hill farms and countryside that she knows so well and sees herself back in Baikie's cottage, a place she knows well, with her father and the elderly lady whose home it was sharing a common interest in the illegal pursuit of stealing birds eggs from their nests.
After her mother died in childbirth, Vera spent her youth trekking after her father as he tramped the hills pursuing his passion, with their only close neighbours and contact being with the stationmaster and his wife, Mrs Gregory, whom was the maternal figure in Vera's life. Since their departure and her fathers death, Vera has changed nothing about the desolate and lonely house she avoids spending time in, complete with New Age hippy neighbours who have taken her under their wing.
Vera's close working relationship is with her Sergeant and renowned teacher's pet, Joe Ashworth, and the point of view of her harried colleagues is largely omitted is the first instalment but in subsequent novels it has become more prominent.
The benefit is the opportunity of seeing and hearing Vera musing on her own upbringing though is a valuable insight into her gruff persona. Although this first introduction to the inspired creation of Inspector Vera Stanhope does stretch to just over five-hundred-pages, it is one of the most satisfying and juiciest cases with the opportunity of seeing Vera amongst the rugged countryside that she grew up with.
Brilliantly constructed in three parts, the first sees three very different women thrown together into the uncomfortably close proximity of Baikie's Cottage in order to conduct an Environmental Impact Assessment prior to the proposed development of a quarry across the landscape.
First to arrive is Rachael Lambert, team leader for the first time, still raw from her manipulation by the caddish Peter Kemp, boss of the environmental consultancy that she works for.
A return to Kimmerston will see Rachael reunited her with her psychology spouting mother, Edie Lambert and with close friend, Bella Furness, wife of Dougie, the farmer at Black Law.
Since Dougie's stroke, Bella has resolutely managed the farm and was in love with her husband and her life, hence when Rachael arrives only to be met by her hanging corpse she refuses to believe that her friend would have taken her own life, preferring instead to suspect that this could have something to do with the impending development plans by Slateburn Quarries, where Dougie's own son is now employed.
As readers see the unfolding week through the eyes of first earnest Rachael, then move on to married and over-confident man eater, botanist Anne Preece, never short of a flip response and finally through to withdrawn mammal expert, Grace Fulwell, the same period is retold through three very differing pairs of eyes.
With all three women having their own closely guarded reasons for undertaking the assessment and staying tight-lipped about their reasons, the tension and stifled atmosphere that pervades generates genuine suspense. This first part ends with the discovery of the body of Grace, only for the second part to see the no-nonsense DI Vera Stanhope enter proceedings, never afraid of probing or phrasing a downright nosy question.
Hearing each of the women's reasons for being drawn to the impact assessment means the length of five-hundred-pages rattles past and never seems drawn out, with Cleeves providing a masterclass in entwining psychological suspense within the police procedural genre. Vera is in her pomp as the second part of the novel opens, firing off questions, gossiping and manipulating with a devious ploy for the two remaining assessors, Rachael and Anne, to continue their work.
After all, if the motive for the murder is a corporate act of intimidation, the abandonment of the assessment project will be serving the murders desired purpose. The title of this first outing is also one of the most appropriate, with The Crow Trap being a metaphor for the sitting target of two lone females almost acting as a siren in drawing further danger into the remote region surrounding Black Law farm.
As Rachael refuses to believe Bella's suicide was her own idea, Vera uncovers every stone and her abrupt stage manner sees her wrong-foot everyone she encounters. Part three is left wide open for DI Vera Stanhope to create merry hell for her bosses with her unorthodox methodology along the way.
It is not only Vera and her Sergeant, Joe Ashworth who are brilliantly brought to life, it is the entire cast whose lives are disentangled against the unflinching backdrop of the hill farms. With ulterior motives and hidden secrets waiting to be exposed, Ann Cleeves keeps the shocks coming and combines this with the amusement to be had as the strident Vera leaves her indelible mark on the landscape. The Crow Trap is a character driven and thoroughly pleasurable novel with a gossipy overtone and an infectious humour.
Vera shrewdly massages egos and smashes others as she plays to the audience with a showmanship that is worthy of the stage. Television viewers who moan about the dour and wind-swept Northumberland landscapes would be thoroughly well-served by becoming acquainted the character that Cleeves has created in novel form. It is only through reading her work that I have come to appreciate the multifaceted talents of DI Vera and her long-suffering sounding board, Joe Ashworth.
In a world where so much of crime fiction is driven by the dysfunctional male lead detectives, Vera is an inspired creation and no other author comes close to Ann Cleeves for extracting the secrets that give rise to murder and mayhem.
I will shed a silent tear when feisty Vera is shepherded into retirement as she never fails to inspire, humour and touch me in a way no other police lead can. The Crow Trap. A strong episode this as the suspects are long and varied. A woman Bella Furness has been murdered, an environmental investigator Anne Preece finds the body.
Bella was opposed to selling her land to Godfrey Waugh, a local businessman who wants to dig a quarry.
Her stepson now Bella is out of the way now decides to sell the land and put his father in an old people's home. When Vera investigates she finds that Anne Preece is also having an affair with Waugh, who is determined to buy up the surrounding land, however he is confident that it just upping the price that matters.
Vera also has to contend with a distraught a mother who believes Bella had abducted her son many years earlier. It was a case that Vera had worked on. There area lot of strands here which come together, even a side issue about Joe being stressed about his wife and kids as he confides in Godfrey Waugh's wife.
We even have an anti capitalist radical with a violent streak who was friends with Bella. Vera stoically investigates, there is regrets about the the abduction of the child, an investigation where the parents were initially suspected.
Yet Vera is always cunning and believes that the proposed excavation area holds clues to the mystery. Frankie Boyle's New World Order. Holiday Wars. Homestead Rescue. I Am Not Okay with This. Joe Pera Talks with You. Late Show with Stephen Colbert, The. MasterChef: The Professionals. Murdoch Mysteries. Newsroom Tokyo. On the Case with Paula Zahn. Ordinary Joe. Other TV Shows. Project Runway. Shark Tank. For team leader Rachael Lambert the project is the perfect opportunity to rebuild her confidence after a double-betrayal by her lover and boss, Peter Kemp.
Botanist Anne Preece, on the other hand, sees it as a chance to indulge in a little deception of her own. And then there is Grace Fulwell, a strange, uncommunicative young woman with plenty of her own secrets to hide
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