Play Dead

by Peter Dickinson

Ebook, 1992

Status

Available

Call number

Fic Mystery Dickinson

Collections

Publication

Mysterious Pr (1992), Edition: First Edition, Hardcover, 282 pages

Description

A London woman taking her grandson to the park finds her lonely life disrupted by murder in this award-winning author's "gripping thriller" (Reginald Hill). Poppy Tasker never imagined this would be her life at age fifty: divorced, living alone, and stuck caring for a tiny grandson while his mother is busy seeking public office. Sad and resentful, Poppy feels completely detached from the nannies she's now forced to associate with when she brings little Toby to the park to play. But her discomfort is replaced by a creeping dread when she notices a stranger watching her and the boy a bit too closely--and her fear turns to near panic when the man tries to follow them home.   The following day, the stalker is found murdered in the park, his corpse decorated in an odd and troubling manner. Poppy's terror grows as she realizes that she and her innocent grandson have become entangled in something twisted and very dangerous. Then the nanny of one of Toby's playground friends meets an untimely end--and Poppy realizes that this may only be the beginning. One of the true greats of contemporary British crime fiction, Peter Dickinson is often compared to luminaries including Ruth Rendell, Peter Lovesey, P. D. James, and Reginald Hill. Play Dead is a shining example of his storytelling artistry.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member jjmcgaffey
An extremely odd book. It can't decide if it's a mystery or a slice-of-life or a psychological examination of a highly diverse group of people - makes it a little hard to keep track of what's going on at time. The book starts in a playground, with a (young) grandmother and her grandson along with a
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gang of nannies (the Nafia is what they're called occasionally in the book) and at least one mother. All the children are quite young, most of them pre-talking. There's a mysterious man who stares at the grandson and then apparently attempts to follow him and his grandmother home; from there, English parliamentary politics and the fantasy/sex life of the grandmother play equally major roles in setting up and eventually solving a pair of murders. Lesser roles are played by opera, the Romanian revolution, and a hefty Persian cat, plus several of the kids. Seriously weird (in more-or-less standard Dickinson fashion), and I'll need to let it percolate for at least a couple months before I'll have any idea if I'll want to re-read this. I rather like Poppy, and Toby and Deborah are great. The Inspector's OK, though we don't see too much of him. And I love the old couple (Ogden-Ferrers? something like that). Beyond that, the book is full of the most self-centered, self-absorbed, unthinking lot of idiots.... Well. Let it sit for a while and I'll revise my opinion - either up or down.
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Awards

Language

Original publication date

1991

Physical description

282 p.; 8.2 inches

ISBN

0892964782 / 9780892964789

DDC/MDS

Fic Mystery Dickinson

Rating

½ (17 ratings; 3.6)
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