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Read A Question Of Guilt (1990)

A Question of Guilt (1990)

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Genre
Series
Rating
3.48 of 5 Votes: 2
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ISBN
0671676652 (ISBN13: 9780671676650)
Language
English
Publisher
pocket books

A Question Of Guilt (1990) - Plot & Excerpts

A Question Of GuiltbyFrances FyfieldEssentially...This is another Helen West book...in this one she is involved in a really bizarre murder trial.My thoughts after reading this book...I am in bookish love with this author. In my mind she is every bit as good...if not better than...Elizabeth George, Alan Bradley, and Deborah Crombie. This book was intense, extremely well plotted and filled with the kind of characters you will love and the kind that you will love to hate! There were even two precious cats in this book! One was Bailey's and one was Helen's...yummy British kitties!So...because this is a mystery I will give nothing away except for this...Helen is involved in a case and the defendant...Eileen...comes to hate her horribly and from prison plots Helen's demise. The plot is complicated, tricky and intricate. I have been reading these out of order but I truly don't think that matters. This is the book where she meets Bailey...her love interest in this book as well as in future books. They are both involved in this case. Eileen is the woman in jail initially for hiring a man named Stanislaus to murder the wife of the man she is obsessed with. When he is caught Eileen begins to manipulate Ed...Stanislaus's son. Ed appears to be quite a brutish evil person...even though he is youngish. And then there is Peter...another son...younger than Ed. He has a sort of accidental infatuation with Helen, Helen's garden, and Helen's cat.Eileen appears to be a thoroughly evil and unstable person...sort of big, ungainly, ill treated by her father...thus her hatred of "attractive" women.What I loved about this book...Oh my word I loved it all...Helen and Bailey, Helen baking puffy scones with Peter, Helen and Bailey's cat. I loved the descriptions of their flats, their food , their dealings with each other. I loved that on their first "date" Bailey straightened out Helen's crooked shelves. I loved that they both loved reading mysteries! I love the way this author uses words!What I did not love...OMG...Eileen and Ed were the most awful creepy characters around. I despised both of them. Eileen because she thought she was so clever and Ed for what he did to Helen and also for the way he treated his brother Peter!Final thoughts...I can not tell you enough how much I loved this book. Cozy, quirky, British loveliness in a book impossible to put down!

This is a great book with amazing characters. Helen is a great character and I love the chemistry between her and Bailey. This book is more romance than mystery but a fantastic read. The villain in this book is one of the most well written villains I have ever read. Eileen is a villain you will love to hate. Fyfield created a wonderful read that I could not put down. This is one of my favorite books on Fyfields. Its not the first of hers I've read but its her first book and one of her finest.http://twinopinionsreview.blogspot.co...

What do You think about A Question Of Guilt (1990)?

Our first glimpse of Helen West, the prosecuting attorney in a complex murder case, reveals her studying the case files while she eats. The defendant, Stanislaus Jaskowski, of Polish origin, was a part-time private investigator, charged with the murder of one Sylvia Bernard, the wife of a solicitor, Michael Bernard. Mrs. Eileen Cartwright is listed as someone obsessed with Michael Bernard, and Jaskowski claims that she paid him to kill Sylvia.In her office, which is comfortable but untidy, she works, and soon is joined by Geoffrey Bailey and his colleague, Mr. Ryan, where they go over the file.The author lays out the cozy settings, gives vivid descriptions of the characters, and offers us an opportunity to listen in on the discussions in which they are involved in such a way that completely engaged me. Over the following pages, the plot unfolds, as even more characters are introduced and we come to see the intricacies of how they fit into the big picture.Many of the characters were unlikeable. Jaskowski's son, Edward, who had a secret liaison with Eileen Cartwright at some point; and even Ryan, the underling to Geoffrey Bailey, who makes some pathetic choices. Mrs. Cartwright's pure evil is slowly unleashed on someone else. Who will save the day? How does Peter, Edward's younger brother, fit into the rescue?The twisted plot did keep me reading, and I liked the sections with Helen and Geoffrey the best. A budding romance between them kept things interesting. There were numerous subplots and other characters that had peripheral roles in the story, and I could have done without them. Overall, I enjoyed "A Question of Guilt: A Helen West Mystery," but sections of the story bogged down for me. An overall 4.0 stars.
—Laurel-Rain

Kathy's Review:I read this book as if I were drifting in and out of sleep. Some portions of it lost me; others pulled me in. In particular I enjoyed the love story between Bailey and Helen. Everything else? Just meh. Initially the plot seemed interesting but there wasn’t enough focus on Eileen for me to really be too invested in what was going on with her.Unfortunately, this one fell flat for me as a whole. Maybe it was the rather dry writing style, maybe it was the fact that it was British, maybe it was something else entirely that I can’t quite put my finger on. The one plot was about all I could take away from this novel. I’m not even sure I could tell you for certain that Eileen was convicted.And finally … this cover artwork. What in the what? This honestly doesn’t have anything to do with the story (as far as I remember). At the very least, it doesn’t represent the plot at large. So if you think you’re going to read something about this well-endowed woman clawing at the door … I am sorry, but she’s not in there.*An ecopy was provided by the publisher via Edelweiss in exchange for an honest review.
—Literary

Some elements of this book really appealed to me and some just escaped me. There's no doubt the book is well written, but I got lost during some of the exposition segments about the British legal system and found myself skimming those parts. The characters and their relationships were really interesting, and when the book began to tie together about 2/3 of the way through I started to enjoy it a lot more. I am tempted to try another one of these, hoping there is more of the second experience and less of the first.
—Stacy

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