The Moving Toyshop (A Gervase Fen Mystery)
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Narrated by:
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Paul Panting
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By:
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Edmund Crispin
About this listen
As inventive as Agatha Christie, as hilarious as P.G. Wodehouse – discover the delightful detective stories of Edmund Crispin. Crime fiction at its quirkiest and best.
Richard Cadogan, poet and would-be bon vivant, arrives for what he thinks will be a relaxing holiday in the city of dreaming spires. Late one night, however, he discovers the dead body of an elderly woman lying in a toyshop and is coshed on the head. When he comes to, he finds that the toyshop has disappeared and been replaced with a grocery store. The police are understandably skeptical of this tale but Richard's former schoolmate, Gervase Fen (Oxford professor and amateur detective), knows that truth is stranger than fiction (in fiction, at least). Soon the intrepid duo are careening around town in hot pursuit of clues but just when they think they understand what has happened, the disappearing-toyshop mystery takes a sharp turn…
Erudite, eccentric and entirely delightful – Before Morse, Oxford's murders were solved by Gervase Fen, the most unpredictable detective in classic crime fiction.
©1946 Edmund Crispin (P)2015 HarperCollins Publishers LtdCritic reviews
"A clever, funny and rightly famous story set in Oxford 30 years before Morse started pounding the beat" The Times, 100 Best Crime Novels of the Twentieth Century
"The characters were so engaging and the writing so mischievous, that I thoroughly enjoyed it" Miles Kington, Independent
"One of my all-time favorite books" Michael Dirda, Washington Post
"One of the undiscovered treasures of British crime fiction: Crispin's storytelling is intelligent, humane, surprising and rattling good fun" A.L. Kennedy
"A classic crime novel with a surreal streak… It's a clever, energetic romp, written with wit" Val McDermid, The Week
What listeners say about The Moving Toyshop (A Gervase Fen Mystery)
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Ginger
- 09-12-15
Fun story
Well written, atmospheric descriptions of place, weather etc. Interesting vocabulary and literary illusions. This has been penned by an academic having fun.
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- Mrs. K. I. Richards
- 27-08-15
i want some excitement in my life
Any additional comments?
that's what poet Richard cadogan tells his publisher and heads off to oxford to be with gervase fen an old friend. . he gets more than he bargained for when he inadvertently finds himself in a deserted toy shop. he then finds a dead body, so begins the third book in the series and it has everything you could wish for, following clues, chases both on foot and in a car, and funnier than the previous books. loved it.
recommended.
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- Hepwood Flutey
- 13-02-16
Brilliant - possibly the best Gervase Fen novel!
Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
I would totally recommend this to a friend. All the Gervase Fen (not Phinn!) novels are hilarious, and quirky, and satisfying.
What did you like best about this story?
I can't isolate one thing - the characters, old friends by now; the plot - wow! Who would have thought?! The great writing - too much to love to isolate one thing. Enjoyed Paul Panting's reading too.
Which character – as performed by Paul Panting – was your favourite?
Well, Gervase Fen is irascible and erratic and impertinent and brilliant, so I suppose he must take the trophy.
Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
If I had that long just to listen I would!
Any additional comments?
It is excellent - don't know what other superlatives to add. If you like classic mysteries, I would think you would enjoy this!
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1 person found this helpful
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- AudiobookDevotee
- 25-07-24
Great book
I really liked this. Obviously it's archaic and dated and sexist; it was written years ago and set in 1938 (although with no mention of war strangely). The characters are good, not much depth but they didn't need it to carry the plot.
The plot itself was a bit ridiculous and farfetched but not as much as to snap me out of the book. The setting was well described and the narration was good albeit slightly slow.
And, unlike modern books, there was only one timeline! Refreshing change! I would certainly recommend this to a friend.
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- twigs way
- 28-06-18
totally spoilt by appalling narration.
Gervase Fen is meant to be a professor of English - a 'fiction' totally spoilt by the fact this narrator failed to pronouce many of the words correctly and failed to put the correct emphasis within the sentance structure leaving the listener unsure at times who was referring to what. Listening was painful. I am sure there used to be a copy of this book narrated by Philip Bird who does Fen so well. I had to give up on this version after a couple of hours it was so awful.
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3 people found this helpful
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- K
- 05-11-17
Weird
This is a very whimsical story. Some people may find that an original and attractive quality but for me it meant the plot was thin in places and unnecessary convoluted in others. It 's not a logical story and the characters are strange - on purpose. It's clearly a period piece and may have amused the entitled and possibly bomb-happy undergraduates of the post-war years but it's all a bit too consciously jaunty for my own rather sober and perhaps, by comparison, Bolshevik tastes.
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2 people found this helpful
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- Janey
- 08-07-17
Awful
I could only endure the first few chapters of this book. The monotonous narration drove me mad. The voices were indistinguishable and I could not get into the story at all. Deleted it immediately and have tried to return it.
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1 person found this helpful