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Grave Coffin (Worldwide Library Mysteries)

Grave Coffin (Worldwide Library Mysteries)
By Gwendoline Butler

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Product Description

Dying Words

Next to the body of the murdered police officer was a note with the scrawled words "Ask Coffin." But what is it that John Coffin, Commander of London's Second City police, is supposed to know?

The victim, Harry Seton, was investigating a ring of counterfeit pharmaceuticals, and was also secretly looking into some internal police corruption. Did his cryptic message refer to either case? Or could it be a link to Coffin's other serious concern at the moment: the disappearance of four schoolboys, one of whom has been found murdered?

As Coffin begins to probe into his colleague's corruption investigation, he discovers a startling connection. The missing boys were related to members of the Second City force. As the mounting terror strikes closer to home, Coffin follows a dark trail to the places of deep evil . . . and ultimate sin.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1895392 in Books
  • Published on: 2001-08-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 256 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
John Coffin, Chief Commander of the Second City of London Police and veteran of more than 20 novels (Coffin's Games; The Coffin Tree, etc.), has to juggle a secret assignment in addition to a serial-murder case in this absorbing police procedural in the classic manner. Trouble begins with the discovery of the mutilated body of detective Harry Seton, who was part of a special detail to eliminate British traffic and possible British manufacture of counterfeit pharmaceutical productsAand had been looking into police corruption. On orders from above, Coffin has to follow up on Seton's clandestine investigation into the latter case. Meanwhile, the commander has a gruesome set of schoolboy murders in his own patch. Particularly unsettling is that each boy had a parent connected in some way to the police. Coffin calls on the usual array of quirky personalities for support: Inspector Paddy Devlin, a striking woman who specializes in pederast cases; his chief adjutant, Paul Masters, whose white Pekinese, Augustus (possibly a police dog working undercover), barks and sniffs for important clues; and Coffin's actress wife, Stella Pinero, with her emotional unpredictability. In the end Coffin isn't sure who poses the greater threatASeton's killer or the deranged child-murderer. For readers new to the series, the author provides both a note explaining the inspiration for the setting ("Second City" corresponds to London's East End) and a helpful summary of Coffin's life and career. (Aug.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review
". . . retains all the freshness of one of the best English police procedural series on the market today." -- Harriet Klausner Internet review

About the Author
GWENDOLINE BUTLER lives in Surrey, England, and has written over 20 mysteries featuring Scotland Yard's John Coffin.


Customer Reviews

Well done5
The mutilated corpse of a peer shakes up the entire London's Second City police force. Detective Harry Seton was allegedly working on the illegal manufacturing of pharmaceutical products, but apparently was actually investigating police corruption. His superiors order Chief Commander John Coffin to serendipitously continue Seton's inquiries into law enforcement official's dishonesty.

While struggling with that distasteful inquest, John works an even more repugnant case. Someone is viciously murdering schoolboys whose link is each one has a parent connected to the police. Unlike the former case that requires him to go at it alone, John uses his full staff of experts as well as his actress-wife to search for a deadly killer.

The twentieth John Coffin tale retains all the freshness of one of the best English police procedural series on the market today. The story line contains two sub-plots that stretch the hero beyond his personal endurance limit. Long time fans will relish John's inquiries into corruption as well as welcome old friends working to stop a brutal killing machine. New readers will gain insight into the series not only from this well written tale, but also from Gwendolyn Butler's insightful brief notes that provide background material.

Harriet Klausner

Solid writing, grisley tale...3
A GRAVE COFFIN by Gwendoline Butler is a good read. The book is mostly set in "Second City" (based on Docklands that is "second" after the City of London which is "first"). The Second City of COFFIN seems to be a figment of the author's imagination-at least I could not find any geographic correlation between her "Second City" and Docklands in the A-Z.

COFFIN is filled with scattered literary illusions for which a high school knowledge of English should provide adequate background, including references to Oxford and Lewis Carroll and black holes as well as drugs and Sherlock Holmes.

The setting for COFFIN is not as "British" as that found in books by P.D. James or Minette Walters where one can expect minute geographic details. In fact, the background for COFFIN puts me in mind of the Dalziel and Pascoe series--vaguly familiar but you would not be able to find it on a 7.5" map.

The English in COFFIN is British and Butler has a wry sense of humor, but I enjoy the British sense of humor and am familiar with their terminology so I had no problem. If you know what buggery is you won't either. In fact, the strength of Butler's writing lies in the ironic thoughts of her lead character Coffin (and his dog Augustus, i.e. Gus) for whom he thinks.

The plot of A GRAVE COFFIN involves two tangentially related cases. The first case involves the manufacture and sale of pharmaceuticals, in this instance not illegal drugs for a change but facsimiles of patented drugs that not only rip-off the patent holders but endanger the consumer. The second tale is grisley as it involves the sexual abuse, mutilation and deaths of four boys around age 10.

Butler does a good job of laying out her crimes, leading her detectives onward with clues, and tying up most of the loose ends. Although she is dealing with terrible murders, she does not dwell on the graphic aspects any more than necessary to futher her storyline. In other words, her descriptions of the mutilated corpses are not sensational.

Her cops engage in mostly realistic police work (not an impulsive lone dog in the bunch) although Butler finesses the detailed forensics explanations. Her focus is on the main characters and the behaviour and motivations of suspects. She uses the backdrop of the domestic life of Inspector Coffin and his actress wife Stella and their little Peke Gus. If you enjoy the company of dogs you might enjoy Dectective Coffin and his fluffy white canine companion who manages to become very dirty at times.

This was my first Inspector Coffin mystery and I found it easy to read without having read the earlier books in Butler's series. I'll read others but the series won't go to the top of my list, not because Butler isn't good but because I have so much else to read. I'm still trying to work my way though Dalziel and Pascoe and Janet Evanovich's 1-2-3-4-5-6 series. I bought the hard cover of A GRAVE COFFIN but you might wait and buy the paperback. This is exactly the kind of book to take on a 6-7 hour flight and toss out at the end of your journey.

Counterfeit pharmaceuticals and pedophilia5
This is one of the later novels in the John Coffin series, and takes place when he is a police Commander. It is probably better to start with an earlier book in the series to establish the characters, but the book reads fairly well as a stand alone novel. It involves two cases, one the problem with the manufacture and sale of counterfeit pharmaceuticals, possible because of the huge markup in the price of patented drugs. The other case is the discovery of the bodies of missing children. The two cases run in parallel.

The case is fiction,using fictional settings and characters, but set among real locations, the practive of many mystery writers since Sir Arthur Conan Doyle created Sherlock Holmes. It this case we find ourselves in the restored Docklands area of London, with side excursions into Oxford and other cities.

Readers should be advised that the story is set in the UK and written using the King's English. The terminology and sentence structure are a little different than the English used in the US, but if you are used to reading mysteries with UK settings you should have no problem.