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The Skull Beneath the Skin, by P.D. James

The Skull Beneath the Skin, by P.D. James



The Skull Beneath the Skin, by P.D. James

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The Skull Beneath the Skin, by P.D. James

Hired to protect beautiful but neurotic actress Clarissa Lisle from a spate of poison pen letters, Cordelia Gray is unprepared for a case as deadly as it is mysterious.

  • Sales Rank: #6110349 in Books
  • Published on: 1994
  • Format: Audiobook
  • Binding: Audio CD

Review
"A fine novel . . . from its very first pages you feel you are in marvellously sure hands." "--The Times" "Irresistible." --"Winnipeg Free Press" "Original, suspenseful, ingenious. . . . A whacking great whodunit by the reigning Queen of Mystery." --"Calgary Sun" "Her concern with the psychological reality of her characters is complemented by a scrupulous attention to physical detail, an easy ear for dialogue and a concise voice for description. Taken together, these are an unfailing combination." --"The Hamilton Spectator" "The reason it takes me so long to write is because it takes a long time for the characters to reveal themselves to me. My ambition as a writer is to make even the minor characters come alive." --P. D. James "James pulls out all the stops ... an overlay of lust; midnight apparitions; hairbreadth escapes." "--New York Magazine ""A masterly version of the clue-and-alibi game ... five star." --"Th

About the Author
P.D. James was born in Oxford in 1920 and educated at Cambridge High School. Widely acknowledged as "the greatest contemporary writer of classic crime" (The London Sunday Times), she has written twenty books and been awarded major prizes for her crime writing in Great Britain, America, Italy, and Scandinavia. After 30 years in the civil service, including a senior position in the Police and Criminal Justice Departments of Great Britain's Home Office, she held a series of distinguished cultural and literary offices, among them Governor of the BBC, on the boards of the Arts Council and British Council and as a magistrate in London. She is the lifelong President of the Society of Authors. She was awarded the OBE in 1983 and created Baroness James of Holland Park in 1991. In 1999 she was given the Mystery Writers of America Grandmaster Award. She has honorary doctorates from seven British universities. James is the widow of a doctor and has two children, five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.

For information on other P.D. James backlist titles, click here.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

Chapter One

There could be no doubt about it; the new nameplate was crooked. Cordelia had no need to adopt Bevis's expedient of dodging through the mid-morning traffic which cluttered Kingly Street and squinting at the plaque through a dazzle of grinding delivery vans and taxis to recognize stark mathematical fact: the neat bronze oblong, so carefully designed and so expensive, was half an inch out of true. Lopsided as it was, it looked, she thought, despite the simplicity of its wording, both pretentious and ridiculous, a fitting advertisement of irrational hope and ill-advised enterprise.


PRYDE'S DETECTIVE AGENCY
(Third Floor)
PROP.: CORDELIA GRAY


Had she been superstitious, she might have believed that Bernie's unquiet spirit was protesting against the new plaque with the deletion of his name. And, indeed, it had seemed at the time symbolic, the final obliteration of Bernie at her hands. She had never considered changing the name of the agency; while it remained in being it would always be Pryde's. But it had become increasingly irksome to be asked by her clients, disconcerted as much by her sex as by her youth, "But I thought I would be seeing Mr. Pryde." They might as well know from the start that there was now only one proprietor and she a female.

Bevis rejoined her at the door, his pretty, mobile face a parody of desolation, and said, "I measured it carefully from the ground, honestly, Miss Gray."

"I know. The pavement must be uneven. It's my fault. We should have bought a spirit level."

But she had been trying to limit expenditure from petty cash, ten pounds a week kept in the battered cigarette tin inherited from Bernie with its picture of the battle of Jutland, from which money seemed to drain away by a mysterious process unrelated to actual expenditure. It had been only too easy for her to accept the assurance of Bevis, leaping from his typewriter, that he was handy with a screwdriver, forgetting that, for Bevis, any job was preferable to the one he was actually supposed to be doing.

He said, "If I close my left eye and hold my head like this, it looks all right."

"But we can't rely on a succession of one-eyed, wry-necked clients, Bevis."

Glancing at Bevis's face, which had now fallen into an extreme of despair which would not have been inappropriate to the announcement of an atomic attack, Cordelia felt an obscure desire to comfort him for his own incompetence. One of the disconcerting aspects of being an employer of staff, a role for which she increasingly felt herself almost wholly unsuited, was this oversensitivity to their feelings coupled with a vague sense of guilt. This was the more irrational because, strictly speaking, she didn't directly employ either Bevis or Miss Maudsley. Both were hired from Miss Feeley's employment agency on a weekly basis when the agency's case load warranted it. There was seldom competition for their services; both were invariably and suspiciously available when asked for. Both gave her honesty, conscientious timekeeping, and a fierce loyalty; both would, no doubt, have also given her efficient secretarial service if that had lain in their power. Both added to her anxieties, since she knew that the failure of the agency would be almost as traumatic for them as for her.

Miss Maudsley would suffer the more. She was a gentle, sixty-two-year-old rector's sister, eking out her pension in a bed-sitting-room in South Kensington, whose gentility, age, incompetence, and virginity had made her the butt of the countless typing pools through which she had drifted since her brother's death. Bevis, with his facile, slightly venial charm, was better equipped to survive in the London jungle. He was supposed to be a dancer working as a temporary typist while resting, an inappropriate euphemism when applied to such a restless boy, perpetually fidgeting in his chair or pirouetting on tiptoe, fingers splayed, eyes widened and alarmed, as if poised for flight. He was certificated to type thirty words a minute by an obscure secretarial school long since defunct, but Cordelia reminded herself that even they hadn't guaranteed his proficiency to undertake minor jobs as a handyman.

He and Miss Maudsley were unexpectedly compatible, and a great deal more chat went on in the outer office between the bouts of inexpert typing than Cordelia would have expected from two such discordant personalities, denizens she would have thought of such alien worlds. Bevis poured out his domestic and professional tribulations, liberally laced with inaccurate and occasionally scurrilous theatrical gossip. Miss Maudsley applied to this bewildering world her own mixture of innocence, High Anglican theology, rectory morality, and common sense. Life in the outer office became very cozy at times, but Miss Maudsley had old-fashioned views on the proper distinction to be made between employer and employed and the inner room where Cordelia worked was sacrosanct.

Suddenly Bevis cried out, "Oh, God, it's Tomkins!"

A small black-and-white kitten had appeared at the doorway, shaken one exploratory paw with deceptive insouciance, stretched its tail rigid, then shivered with ecstatic apprehension and darted under a post-office van and out of sight. Bevis, wailing, fled in pursuit. Tomkins was one of the agency's failures, having been repudiated by a spinster of that name who had employed Cordelia to find her missing black kitten with a white eye patch, two white paws, and a striped tail. Tomkins precisely fulfilled the specifications, but his putative mistress had immediately known him for an impostor. Having rescued him from imminent starvation on a building site behind Victoria Station, they could hardly abandon him, and he now lived in the outer office with a dirt tray, a cushioned basket, and access to the roof via a partly opened window for his nightly excursions. He was a drain on resources, not so much because of the rising cost of cat food -- although it was a pity that Miss Maudsley had encouraged an addiction to tastes beyond their means by providing the most expensive tin on the market for his first meal and that Tomkins, although in general a stupid cat, could apparently read labels -- but because Bevis wasted too much time playing with him, tossing a Ping-Pong ball or drawing a rabbit's foot on string across the office floor with cries of "Oh, look, Miss Gray! Isn't he a clever leaping beastie?"

The clever leaping beastie, having caused chaos among the traffic in Kingly Street, now streaked into the rear entrance of a pharmacy with Bevis in noisy pursuit. Cordelia guessed that neither kitten nor boy was likely to reappear for some time. Bevis picked up new friends as obsessively as others pick up litter, and Tomkins would be a great introducer. Oppressed by the realization that Bevis's morning was now fated to be almost entirely unproductive, Cordelia was aware of a lethargic disinclination to any further effort herself. She stood against the jamb of the doorway, closed her eyes, and lifted her face to the unseasonable warmth of the late-September sun. Distancing herself by an effort of will from the grind and clamor of the street, the pervading smell of petrol, the clatter of passing feet, she played with the temptation, which she knew she would resist, to walk away from it all, leaving the lopsided plaque as a memorial to her efforts to keep faith with the dead Bernie and his impossible dream.

She supposed that she ought to be relieved that the agency was beginning to make a reputation for something, even if it was only for finding lost pets. Undoubtedly there was a need for such a service, and one in which she suspected they had a monopoly; and the clients, tearful, desperate, outraged by what they saw as the callous indifference of the local C.I.D., never haggled at the size of the bill and paid more promptly than Cordelia suspected they might have done for the return of a relative. Even when the agency's efforts had been unsuccessful and Cordelia had to present her account with apologies, the bill was invariably paid without demur. Perhaps the owners were motivated by the natural human need at a time of bereavement to feel that something had been done, however unlikely that something, to achieve success. But frequently there were successes. Miss Maudsley, in particular, had a persistence in door-to-door inquiries, coupled with an almost uncanny empathy with the feline mind, that had restored at least half a dozen cats, damp, half starved, and feebly mewing, to their ecstatic owners, while occasionally exposing the perfidy of those animals which had been living a double life and had transferred more or less permanently to their second home. She managed to conquer her timidity when in pursuit of cat thieves and on Saturday mornings walked purposefully through the rowdy exuberance and half-submerged terrors of London's street markets as if under divine protection, which no doubt she felt herself to be. But Cordelia wondered from time to time what poor, ambitious, pathetic Bernie would have thought about the debasement of his dream child. Lulled into a trancelike peace by the warmth and the sun, Cordelia recalled with startling clarity that confident, overloud voice: "We've got a gold mine here, partner, if once we get started." She was glad that he couldn't know how small the nuggets and how thin the seam.

A voice, quiet, masculine, and authoritative, broke into her reverie.

"That nameplate's crooked."

"I know."

Cordelia opened her eyes. The voice was deceptive: he was older than she had expected, she guessed a little over sixty. Despite the heat of the day he was wearing a tweed jacket, well tailored but old, with leather patches on the elbows. He wasn't tall, perhaps no more than five feet ten inches, but he stood very upright with an easy, confident stance, almost an elegance, which she sensed concealed an inner wariness as if he were tensed for a word of command. She wondered if he had once been a soldier. His head was held high and fixed, the gray and somewhat sparse hair brushed smoothly back from a high, creased forehead. The face was long and bony, with a dominant nose jutting from cheeks reddened and crossed by broken veins, and a wide, well-shaped mouth. The eyes which scrutinized her, not, she felt, unbenignly, were keen under the bushy eyebrows. The left brow was held higher than the right, and she saw that he had a habit of twitching his brows and working the corners of the wide mouth; it gave his face a restlessness which was singularly at variance with the stillness of his body and which made it slightly embarrassing for her to meet his eyes.

He said, "Better get the job done properly."

She watched without speaking while he put down the briefcase he was carrying, took from a pocket a pen and his wallet, found a card, and wrote on the back of it in an upright, rather schoolboyish hand.

Taking the card, Cordelia noted the single name, Morgan, and the telephone number, then turned it over. She read: Sir George Ralston, Bt., D.S.O., M.C.

So she was right. He had been a soldier. She asked, "Will he be expensive, this Mr. Morgan?"

"Less expensive than making a nonsense. Tell him I gave you his number. He'll charge what the job's worth, no more."

Cordelia's heart lifted. The lopsided name plaque, gravely surveyed by the critical eye of this unexpected and eccentric knight errant, suddenly seemed to her irresistibly funny, no longer a calamity but a joke. Even Kingly Street was transformed with her mood and became a glittering, sunlit bazaar, pulsating with optimism and life. She almost laughed aloud.

Controlling her trembling mouth, she said gravely, "It's very kind of you. Are you a connoisseur of nameplates or just a public benefactor?"

"Some people think I'm a public menace. Actually, I'm a client; that is, if you're Cordelia Gray. Don't people ever tell you..."

Cordelia, unreasonably, was disappointed. Why should she have supposed that he was different from other male clients? She finished the sentence for him: "That it's an unsuitable job for a woman? They do, and it isn't."

He said mildly, "I was going to say, 'Don't they ever tell you that your office is difficult to find?' This street's a mess. Half the buildings aren't properly numbered. Too much change of use, I suppose. But the new plate should help when it's properly fixed. Better get it done. Gives a poor impression."

At that moment Bevis panted up beside them, his curls damp with exertion, the telltale screwdriver protruding from his shirt pocket. Holding the richly purring Tomkins against one flushed cheek, he presented his charming delinquency to the newcomer. He was rewarded by a curt "A botched job, that" and a look which instantly rejected him as officer material. Sir George turned to Cordelia.

"Shall we go up, then?"

Cordelia avoided Bevis's eyes, which she guessed were rolling heavenward, and they climbed the narrow, linoleum-covered stairs in single file, Cordelia leading, past the single lavatory and washroom which served all the tenants in the building (she hoped that Sir George wouldn't need to use it), and into the outer office on the third floor. Miss Maudsley's anxious eyes looked up at them over her typewriter. Bevis deposited Tomkins in his basket (where he at once began washing away the contamination of Kingly Street), gave Miss Maudsley a wide-eyed admonitory look, and mouthed the word client at her. Miss Maudsley flushed, half rose from her chair, then subsided and applied herself to painting out an error with a shaking hand. Cordelia led the way into her inner sanctum.

When they were seated, she asked, "Would you like some coffee?"

"Real coffee or ersatz?"

"Well, I suppose you'd call it ersatz. But best-quality ersatz."

"Tea, then, if you have it, preferably Indian. Milk, please. No sugar. No biscuits."

The form of the request was not meant to be offensive. He was used to ascertaining the facts and then asking for what he wanted.

Cordelia put her head outside the door and said, "Tea, please" to Miss Maudsley. The tea, when it arrived, would be served in the delicate Rockingham cups which Miss Maudsley had inherited from her mother and had lent to the agency for the use of special clients only. She had no doubt that Sir George would qualify for the Rockingham.

They faced each other across Bernie's desk. His eyes, gray and keen, inspected her face as if he were an examiner and she a candidate, which in a way she supposed she was. Their sudden, direct, and glittering stare, in contrast to the spasmodically grimacing mouth, was disconcerting.

He said, "Why do you call yourself Pryde's?"

"Because the agency was set up by an ex-Metropolitan policeman, Bernie Pryde. I worked for him for a time as his assistant, and then he made me his partner. When he died he left the agency to me."

"How did he die?"

The question, sharp as an accusation, struck her as odd, but she answered calmly. "He cut his wrists."

She didn't need to close her eyes to see again that remembered scene, garish and sharply outlined as a cinema still. Bernie had lain slumped in the chair in which she now sat, his half-clenched right hand close to the open cutthroat razor, his shrunken left hand, with its scored and gaping wrist, resting palm upwards in the bowl like some exotic sea anemone glimpsed in a rock pool, curling in death its pale and wrinkled tentacles. But no rock pool had ever been so brightly pink. She could smell again the sickly sweet, insistent odor of freshly spilled blood.

"Killed himself, did he?"

His tone lightened. He might have been a golfing partner congratulating Bernie on a well-placed putt, while his quick glance around the office suggested that the action had been in all the circumstances entirely reasonable.

She had no need to see the room through his eyes. What she saw through her own was depressing enough. She and Miss Maudsley had redecorated her office together, painting the walls pale yellow to give an impression of greater light and cleaning the faded carpet with a proprietary liquid; it had dried patchily so that the final impression reminded her of diseased skin. With its newly washed curtains, the room at least looked clean and tidy, too tidy since the absence of clutter suggested no great pressure of work. Every surface was crammed with plants. Miss Maudsley had green fingers, and the cuttings she had taken from her own plants and lovingly tended in a variety of oddly shaped receptacles picked up during her forays into the street markets had flourished despite the poor light. The resulting rampant greenery suggested that it had been cunningly deployed to conceal some sinister defect in the structure or decor. Cordelia still used Bernie's old oak desk, still imagined that she could trace the outline of the bowl in which he had bled away his life, could still identify one particular stain of spilled blood and water. But then there were so many rings, so many stains. His hat, with its upturned brim and grubby ribbon, still hung on the curved wooden coat stand. No jumble sale would take it, and she found herself unable to throw it away. Twice she had taken it as far as the dustbin in the backyard but had been unable to drop it in, finding this final symbolic rejection of Bernie even more personal and traumatic than the exclusion of his name from the brass plaque. If the agency did finally fail -- and she tried not to think what the new rent would be when the present lease came up for renewal in three years' time -- she supposed that she would still leave the hat hanging there in its pathetic decrepitude for unknown hands to toss with fastidious distaste into the wastepaper basket.

The tea arrived. Sir George waited until Miss Maudsley left. Then, measuring milk carefully into his cup, drop by drop, he said, "The job I'm offering is a mixture of functions. You'd be part bodyguard, part private secretary, part investigator, and part -- well, nursemaid. A bit of everything. Not everyone's cup of tea. No knowing how it may turn out."

"I'm supposed to be a private investigator."

"No doubt. Shouldn't be too purist in these times. A job's a job. And you could find yourself involved in detection, even in violence, although it doesn't seem likely. Unpleasant but not dangerous. If I thought there was any real risk to my wife or to you I wouldn't be employing an amateur."

Cordelia said, "Perhaps you could explain what exactly you want me to do."

He frowned into his tea as if reluctant to begin. But when he did his account was lucid, concise, and unhesitating.

"My wife is the actress Clarissa Lisle. You may have heard of her. Most people seem to know of her, although she hasn't worked much recently. I am her third husband; we married in June 1978. In July 1980 she was employed to play Lady Macbeth at the Duke of Clarence's Theater. On the third night of the advertised six-month run she received what she saw as a death threat. These threats have continued intermittently ever since."

He began sipping his tea. Cordelia found herself gazing at him with the anxiety of a child hoping that her offering is acceptable. The pause seemed very long. She asked, "You said that she saw the first note as threatening. Are you implying that its meaning was ambiguous? What form exactly do these threats take?"

"Typewritten notes. Variety of machines by the look of it. Each communication surmounted by a small drawing of a coffin or a skull. All are quotations from plays in which my wife has appeared. All the quotations deal with death or dying: the fear of death, the judgment of death, the inevitability of death."

The reiteration of that numinous word was oppressive. But surely it was her imagination that he twisted it on his lips with mordant satisfaction. She said, "But they don't specifically threaten her?"

"She sees this harping on death as threatening. She's sensitive. Actresses have to be, I suppose. They need to be liked. This isn't friendly. I have the notes here, the ones she kept. The first ones were thrown away. You'll need the evidence."

He clicked open the briefcase and took out a stout manila envelope. From it he spilled a heap of small sheets of paper and began spreading them over the desk. She recognized the type of paper at once; it was a popular, medium-quality white writing paper sold over thousands of stationery counters in three sizes with envelopes to match. The sender had been economical and had selected the smallest size. Each sheet bore a typed quotation surmounted by a small drawing about one inch high, of either an up-ended coffin with the initials R.I.P. on the lid or a skull with crossbones. Neither had required much skill; they were emblems rather than accurate representations. On the other hand they were drawn with a certain sureness of line and decorative sense which suggested some facility with the pen or, in this case, with a black-tipped ballpoint. Under Sir George's bony fingers the white slips of paper with their stark black emblems shifted and rearranged themselves like the cards for some sinister game, hunt the quotation, murderer's snap.

Most of the quotations were familiar, words which would readily come to the mind of anyone reasonably well read in Shakespeare and the Jacobeans who chose to ponder references in English drama to death and the terror of dying. Even reading them now, truncated and childishly embellished as they were, Cordelia felt their nostalgic power. The majority of them were from Shakespeare and the obvious choices were there. The longest by far -- and how could the sender have resisted it? -- was Claudio's anguished cry from Measure for Measure:


Ay, but to die, and go we know not where,
To lie in cold obstruction and to rot,
This sensible warm motion to become
A kneaded clod and the delighted spirit
To bathe in fiery floods, or to reside
In thrilling region of thick-ribbèd ice --
To be imprisoned in the viewless winds,
And blown with restless violence round about
The pendent world
.....................
The weariest and most loathèd worldly life
That age, ache, penury, and imprisonment
Can lay on nature is a paradise
To what we fear of death.


It was difficult to interpret that familiar passage as a personal threat, but most of the other quotations could be seen as more directly intimidating, hinting, she thought, at some retribution for real or imagined wrongs.


He that dies pays all debts.
Oh, thou weed!
Who are so lovely fair and smell'st so sweet
That the sense aches at thee, would thou hadst ne'er been born!


Some care had been taken in the choice of illustration. The skull adorned the lines from Hamlet --


Now get thee to my lady's chamber, and tell her, let
her paint an inch thick, to this favour she must come


-- as it did a passage which Cordelia thought might be from John Webster, although she couldn't identify the play:


Being heretofore drown'd in security,
You know not how to live, nor how to die;
But I have an object that shall startle you,
And make you know whither you are going.


But, even allowing for the sensitivity of an actress, it would take a fairly robust egotism to wrench these familiar words from their contexts and apply them to oneself; that, or a fear of dying so strong as to be morbid. She took a new notebook from her desk drawer and asked, "How do they arrive?"

"Most come by post in the same sort of envelope as the paper and with the address typed. My wife didn't think to keep any of the envelopes. A few were delivered by hand either at the theater or at our London flat. One was pushed under the dressing-room door during the run of Macbeth. The first half dozen or so were destroyed -- best thing to do with them all in my view. These twenty-three are all we now have. I've numbered them in pencil on the back in the order of receipt as far as my wife can remember and with information about when and how each was delivered."

"Thank you. That should be helpful. Your wife has played a great deal of Shakespeare?"

"She was a member of the Malvern Repertory Company for three years after she left drama school and played a fair amount then. Less in recent years."

"And the first of these -- which she threw away -- came when she was playing Lady Macbeth. What happened?"

"The first one was upsetting, but she told no one about it. Thought it was an isolated bit of malice. She says she can't remember what it said, only that it had the drawing of a coffin. Then a second came, and a third, and fourth. During the third week of the season my wife kept breaking down and had to be continually prompted. On the Saturday she ran off the stage during the second act and her understudy had to take over. It's all a matter of confidence. If you think you're going to dry up -- drying is the theatrical jargon, I believe -- then you dry. She was able to return to the part after a week, but it was a struggle to get through the six weeks. After that she was due to appear at Brighton in a revival of one of those thirties murder mysteries, the sort where the ingenue is called Bunty, the hero is Clive, and all the men wear long tennis flannels and keep dashing in and out of french windows. Curious affair. Not exactly her kind of part -- she's a classical actress -- but there aren't a lot of opportunities for middle-aged women. Too many good actresses chasing too few parts, so they tell me. Same thing happened. The first quotation appeared on the morning the play opened, and they came at regular intervals thereafter. The play came off after four weeks, and my wife's performance may have had something to do with it. She thought so. I'm not so sure. It was a stupid plot; couldn't make sense of it myself. Clarissa didn't act again until she accepted a part in Webster's The White Devil at Nottingham, Victoria something or other."

"Vittoria Corombona."

"Was that it? I was in New York for ten days and didn't see it. But the same thing happened. The first note arrived again on the day the play opened. This time my wife went to the police. Not much joy. They took the notes away, thought about them, and brought them back. Sympathetic but not very effective. Made it obvious that they didn't take the death threat seriously. Pointed out that if people are serious about killing, they do it, they don't just threaten. Must say, that was rather my view. They did discover one thing, though. The note which arrived while I was in New York was typed on my old Remington."

Cordelia said, "You still haven't explained how you think I can help."

"Coming to that. This weekend my wife is to play the leading role in an amateur production of The Duchess of Malfi. The play is to be given in Victorian dress and will take place on Courcy Island about two miles off the Dorset coast. The owner of the island, Ambrose Gorringe, has restored the small Victorian theater which was first built by his great-grandfather. I understand that the original Gorringe, who rebuilt the ruined medieval castle, used to entertain the Prince of Wales and his mistress, the actress Lillie Langtry, and the guests used to amuse themselves with amateur theatricals. I suppose the present owner is trying to restore past glories. There was an article in one of the Sunday papers about a year ago describing the island, the restoration of the castle, and theater. You may have seen it."

Cordelia couldn't recall it. She said, "And you want me to go to the island and be with Lady Ralston?"

"I hoped to be there myself, but that won't now be possible. I have a meeting in the west country which I can't miss. I propose to motor down to Speymouth with my wife early Friday morning and take leave of her at the launch. But she needs someone with her. This performance is important to her. There's to be a revival of the play at Chichester in the spring, and if she can regain her confidence she might feel that she can do it. But there's more to it than that. She thinks that the threats may come to a head this weekend, that someone will try to kill her on Courcy Island."

"She must have some reason for thinking that."

"Nothing that she can explain. Nothing that would impress the police. Not rational, perhaps. But that's what she feels. She asked me to get you."

And he had come to get her. Did he always procure for his wife whatever she wanted? She asked again, "What precisely am I being employed to do, Sir George?"

"Protect her from nuisance. Take any telephone calls which come for her. Open any letters. Check the set before the performance if you get the chance. Be on call at night; that's when she's most nervous. And bring a fresh mind to the question of the messages. Find out, if you can in just three days, who is responsible."

Before Cordelia could respond to these concise instructions, there came again that disconcerting pierce of gray frown under the discordant brows.

"D'you like birds?"

Cordelia was temporarily nonplussed. She supposed that few people, except those afflicted with a phobia, would admit to not liking birds. They are, after all, one of the most graceful of life's fragile diversions. But she supposed that Sir George was covertly inquiring whether she could recognize a marsh harrier at fifty yards. She said cautiously, "I'm not very good at identifying the less common species."

"Pity. The island's one of the most interesting natural bird sanctuaries in Great Britain, probably the most remarkable of those in private hands, almost as interesting as Brownsea Island in Poole Harbor. Very similar, come to think of it. Courcy has as many rare birds, the blue-eared and Swinhold pheasants as well as Canada geese, black godwits, and oyster catchers. Pity you're not interested. Any questions -- about the case, I mean?"

Cordelia said tentatively, "If I'm to spend three days with your wife, ought she not to interview me before any decision is made? It's important that she feel she can trust me. She doesn't know me. We haven't even met."

"Yes, you have. That's how she knows she can trust you. She was having tea with a Mrs. Fortescue last week when you returned the Fortescue cat -- Solomon, I think the brute's called. Apparently you found him within thirty minutes of beginning the search, so your bill was correspondingly small. Mrs. Fortescue is devoted to the animal. You could have charged treble. She wouldn't have queried it. That impressed my wife."

Cordelia said, "We're rather expensive. We have to be. But we are honest."

She remembered the drawing room in Eaton Square, a feminine room if femininity implies softness and luxury; a cluttered, cozy repository of silver-framed photographs, an overlavish tea on a low table in front of the Adam fireplace, too many flowers conventionally arranged. Mrs. Fortescue, incoherent with relief and joy, had introduced her guest to Cordelia as a matter of form, but her voice, muffled in Solomon's fur, had been indistinct and Cordelia hadn't caught the name. But the impression had been definite. The visitor had sat very still in her armchair beside the fireplace, one thin leg thrown over the other, heavily ringed hands resting on the arms. Cordelia recalled yellow hair intricately piled and wound above a tall forehead, a small, bee-stung mouth, and immense eyes, deep-set but with heavy, almost swollen lids. She had seemed to impose on the lush conformity of the room a hieratic and angular grace, a distinction which, despite the plainness of the formal suede suit, hinted at some histrionic or eccentric individuality. She had gravely bent her head and watched her friend's effusions with a half-mocking smile. Despite her stillness there had been no impression of peace.

Cordelia said, "I didn't recognize your wife but I remember her very well."

"And you'll take the job?"

"Yes, I'll take it."

He said without embarrassment, "Rather different from finding lost cats. Mrs. Fortescue told my wife what you charge per day. This will be higher, I suppose."

Cordelia said, "The daily rate is the same whatever the job. The final bill depends on the time taken, whether I have to use either of my staff, and the level of expenses. These can sometimes be high. But as I'll be a guest on the island, there will be no hotel bills. When do you want me to arrive?"

"The launch from Courcy -- it's called Shearwater -- will be at Speymouth jetty to meet the nine-thirty-two from Waterloo. Your ticket's in this envelope. My wife has telephoned to let Mr. Gorringe know that she's bringing a secretary-companion to help her with various odd jobs during the weekend. You'll be expected."

So Clarissa Lisle had been confident that she would take the job. And why not? She had taken it. And she was apparently equally confident of being able to get her way with Ambrose Gorringe. Her excuse for including a secretary in the party was surely rather thin, and Cordelia wondered how far it had been believed. To arrive for a country-house weekend accompanied by one's private detective was permissible for royalty, but from any less elevated guest showed a lack of confidence in one's host, while to bring one incognito might reasonably be regarded as a breach of etiquette. It wasn't going to be easy to protect Miss Lisle without betraying that she was there under false pretenses, a discovery which would hardly be agreeable for either her host or fellow guests. She said, "I need to know who else will be on the island and anything you can tell me about them."

"There's not much I can tell. There'll be about one hundred people on the island by Saturday afternoon when the cast and invited audience arrive. But the house party is small. My wife, of course, with Tolly -- Miss Tolgarth -- her dresser. Then my wife's stepson, Simon Lessing, will be there. He's a seventeen-year-old schoolboy, the son of Clarissa's second husband, who drowned in August 1977. He wasn't happy with the relatives who were his guardians, so my wife decided to take him on. I'm not sure why he's invited; music's his interest. Clarissa probably thought it was time he met more people. He's a shy boy. Then there's her cousin, Roma Lisle. Used to be a schoolmistress but now keeps a bookshop somewhere in north London. Unmarried, age about forty-five. I've only met her twice. I think she may be bringing heery which would hardly be agreeable for either her host or fellow guests. She said, "I need to know who else will be on the island and anything you can tell me about them."

"There's not much I can tell. There'll be about one hundred people on the island by Saturday afternoon when the cast and invited audience arrive. But the house party is small. My wife, of course, with Tolly -- Miss Tolgarth -- her dresser. Then my wife's stepson, Simon Lessing, will be there. He's a seventeen-year-old schoolboy, the son of Clarissa's second husband, who drowned in August 1977. He wasn't happy with the relatives who were his guardians, so my wife decided to take him on. I'm not sure why he's invited; music's his interest. Clarissa probably thought it was time he met more people. He's a shy boy. Then there's her cousin, Roma Lisle. Used to be a schoolmistress but now keeps a bookshop somewhere in north London. Unmarried, age about forty-five. I've only met her twice. I think she may be bringing her partner with her, but if so, I can't tell you who he is. And you'll meet the drama critic Ivo Whittingham. He's an old friend of my wife's. He's supposed to be doing a piece about the theater and the performance for one of the color magazines. Ambrose Gorringe will be there, of course. And there are three servants, the butler, Munter, his wife, and Oldfield, who is the boatman and general factotum. I think that's all."

"Tell me about Mr. Gorringe."

"Gorringe has known my wife since childhood. Both their fathers were in the diplomatic. He inherited the island from his uncle in 1977 when he was spending a year abroad. Something to do with tax avoidance. He came back to the UK in 1978 and has spent the last three years restoring the castle and looking after the island. Middle-aged. Unmarried. Read history at Cambridge, I believe. Authority on the Victorians. I know no harm of him."

Cordelia said, "There's one last question I have to ask. Your wife apparently fears for her life, so much so that she is reluctant to be on Courcy Island without protection. Is there any one of that company whom she has reason to fear, reason to suspect?"

She could see at once that the question was unwelcome, perhaps because it forced him to acknowledge what he had implied but never stated, that his wife's fear for her life was hysterical and unreal. She had demanded protection and he was providing it. But he didn't think it was necessary; he believed neither in the danger nor in the means he was employing to reassure her. And now some part of his mind was repelled by the thought that his wife's host and her fellow guests were to be under secret surveillance. He had done what his wife had asked of him, but he didn't like himself any the better for it.

He said curtly, "I think you can put that idea out of your head. My wife has no reason to suspect any of the house party of wishing to harm her, no reason in the world."

Copyright © 1982 by P. D. James

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Watch Your Face
By Frank
As much as I love P.D.James and having read almost all of her books this one just didn't give me what I was looking for. I'm surprised because I love British mysteries and castles and monasteries and just the geography and lay of the land as James often describes it but in this work I felt too overwhelmed by it all and felt like I was reading Snow White or Hansel and Gretel or another of Grimm's fairy tales. I struggled to finish it and of course there were some parts better than others. I have previously loved Cordelia and the previous book was one of the best of P.D.James. Maybe it was just me. If you like James work, include this one in your reading but don't be surprised if you feel something doesn't feel right.

4 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
James is one of the best mystery writers ever.
By Mary Ingram
I have just recently discovered P. D. James and at my age I should have discovered her long ago. Considering the quality of the mystery writing out today by most authors, it is an

extreme pleasure to read James. I plan to read everything I can by P. D. James. I am right now on her Cordelia Gray, Detective

and it is a cant put down.

8 of 16 people found the following review helpful.
unsuitable book for a woman
By E. Durham
I have read P.D. James before and enjoyed those books. However, this book and it's predecessor were immensely unrealistic. Cordelia Gray starts out in each book to be a woman of substance, but through a series of inaction and self- doubt, in both cases she fails to catch the murderer. She becomes too vapid and whiney for my taste and not a heroine at all. She even carries a trophy of sorts from the first book to the second, completely unbelievable that anyone so fraught with emotion could maintain enough detachment to make a good detective. The female characters are variations of real life personalities, but seem to share no connection (despite the author trying to make us believe they do) to each other or even the plot. The male characters are portraits of stereotypic nonsense, cardboard cut-outs of what would be expected from a male if one never shared a planet with one. Unlike Agatha Christie the plots seem to thicken and stall. I would sugest to the readers that the female protagonist is not something Ms. James feels comfortable with or is very good at producing. She instead makes you want to slap her back to reality and tell her to find another job. The ending is probably the most realistic thing for this character to hope for ...a glorified job finding lost cats!

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Senin, 29 Desember 2014

^^ Fee Download When Wallflowers Dance: Becoming a Woman of Righteous Confidence (Bible Study Book), by Angela Thomas

Fee Download When Wallflowers Dance: Becoming a Woman of Righteous Confidence (Bible Study Book), by Angela Thomas

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When Wallflowers Dance: Becoming a Woman of Righteous Confidence (Bible Study Book), by Angela Thomas

When Wallflowers Dance: Becoming a Woman of Righteous Confidence - Member Book by Angela Thomas provides a personal study experience five days a week and includes a Leader Guide and a Retreat Guide. Women of all ages ― both married and single ― will be encouraged to move away from the walls and closer to the heart of God. Angela encourages women to grow up in their faith and fully engage in life, as God intended when He created them. Content is written for 7 DVD-based sessions that can be used in a small-group Bible study or a weekend retreat setting.

  • Sales Rank: #1353671 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: LifeWay Christian Resources
  • Published on: 2008-03-03
  • Released on: 2008-03-03
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.51" h x .40" w x 7.00" l, .65 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 144 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

About the Author

Angela Thomas is a sought-after speaker, teacher, and bestselling author of Do You Think I m Beautiful?, My Single Mom Life, Prayers for My Baby Boy, and Prayers for My Baby Girl. She inspires thousands at national conferences, workshops, and through video studies that she filmed and wrote including Brave: Honest Questions Women Ask. www.angelathomas.com

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46 of 50 people found the following review helpful.
A guide to pursuing an "intentional life"
By FaithfulReader.com
"There is a life that you live with God, and there is the life you live when you are dancing in His arms," writes Angela Thomas in her new book, WHEN WALLFLOWERS DANCE. "Dancing is living in the fullness of your purpose for this life on earth. Dancing is loving every single person that God brings to you with the love He has so abundantly given. Dancing means that you have eyes that can see what matters for eternity. Dancing is a passionate life. Adventure. And living without fear."

Dancing is spiritual maturity. Thomas is calling women to this, away from being what she calls "un-women." Un-women are those who retreat from life by numbing themselves to its hardships. "I became the un-woman in my effort to avoid the relationship landmines all around me," Thomas writes. "Then there was some weird decision that I didn't deserve anything more than a numb, timid existence. And then sometimes it seemed like the more spiritual thing to do was to emotionally fade to gray. Be quiet. Remain unseen and unknown. Forget about becoming anything. Neutral. Unrecognizable. More and more it seems like so many women are surviving decades of their lives by turning their hearts inside out, trying not to feel. Becoming the un-woman." Chief among the problems of numbing yourself to life's pain is that you end up numbing yourself to life's joys as well --- and to God.

The antidote to un-womanliness is learning to dance --- essentially pursuing an "intentional" life. Thomas wants women to take time for their own needs --- body and soul. And her advice covers both; she counsels women to restore order to their physical environment even as they're working to restore spiritual order in their hearts and minds. Find a spiritual mentor and clean out your closets. Deal with deep-seated bitterness in your life and make time for exercise.

Thomas gives women permission to put aside most of their self-imposed expectations --- homemade meals and handwritten thank-you notes among them --- while learning to dance. "I love ironed clothes and beautiful dinners and having my hair styled. But I cannot do it all every day and care for my soul. I am deciding that my soul and the souls of my children matter more. My being peaceful when I'm with them matters more than anything else," she writes. "Sometimes it's more peaceful to drive through for chicken-Caesar wraps than to kill myself for homemade. I desire that part of my life, but I am also in a ridiculously busy season of mothering. Right now it just feels good to have my heart back, I don't want to run ahead of myself and sacrifice any of the growth I've fought so hard to get to."

This kind of cocooning, or focus on the self, is certainly appropriate and healthy at times. But in our self-help-saturated society, sustained efforts at "becoming" are vulnerable to the influence of secular ideas about personal development as contrasted with Biblical principles of finding one's identity in Christ and sacrificial love. The ideas in WHEN WALLFLOWERS DANCE are supported by Scripture, but sometimes they feel more like a Dr. Phil approach to spirituality. This is about you --- you living a full life, you being satisfied, you learning to dance. I wonder if this is the best way to frame a conversation about spiritual maturity.

Perhaps sometimes it is.

Certainly there are "un-women" out there who need permission to get to know themselves again (or for the first time). God did not save us in order that we might become drones --- everyone smiling and nodding on cue, everyone hemming and hawing and deferring. Opinions and unique perspectives are good things to bring to bear on our lives and the lives of those around us. And Thomas's vision does eventually move beyond the self. "Dancing" women can be redemptive influences in their homes, churches, and communities.

And yet, in this age of iPods and Tivo and three Sunday morning services featuring different worship styles and a million other ways to customize our lives based on personal preferences, it seems to me that the bigger spiritual danger for modern women (and men too) is the idolization of the self ---- the elevation of our own desires and preferences so that we are less and less able to function well and lovingly outside our own meticulously constructed spheres.

Thomas gives the example of one friend who, in her pursuit of spiritual maturity, rid her house of any object that "might be a reflection of the old, un-woman life she had been living --- music, DVDs, collections she'd purchased to fill her emptiness." At the same time she decided to decorate her home with things that remind her of the light of Christ --- "stars and cute lamps and beautiful crosses." Thomas writes, "I love that in restoring order she began to surround herself with physical reminders of the One who is leading her out." There's certainly nothing intrinsically wrong about intentional interior design, but is it possible that this woman was just trading one vision of herself for another vision of herself via her debit card?

It's troubling to me that the language of self-help and consumerism linger in so many of our conversations about spiritual formation. And yet, perhaps it's inevitable on some level as we grapple with how spiritual realities should become physical realities in our lives. Maybe Thomas is on to something when she talks about having a clean conscience and a clean car. What's certain is that she's written a book that will provide the permission many women need to take some dancing lessons. And to the extent that it points women towards an engagement with the fullness of life, WHEN WALLFLOWERS DANCE is a good deejay. Turn up the music.

--- Reviewed by Lisa Ann Cockrel

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
A fun yet meaningful read
By sa_murphy
I really liked Angela's style and link to living the spirit-filled life with dancing. I thought her chapters on the Holy Spirit were very good and practical as well. I enjoyed the read because I've been doing a lot of in-depth study and working out of my faith and it was very fun and at the same time based on Truth and solid biblical principal's. I would recommend it to all women on their faith journey....if you're really "theological" it will be a welcomed breath of fresh air, if you're a new christian you'll enjoy the down to earth advice.

13 of 15 people found the following review helpful.
Rev. Fuzzy Lake
By Fuzzy Lake
This book is a must for women who don't know who they are or where they are at with the love that God freely gives.Recomend it to all women struggling with being loved.

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Minggu, 28 Desember 2014

# Ebook Shroud for a Nightingale, by P.D. James

Ebook Shroud for a Nightingale, by P.D. James

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Shroud for a Nightingale, by P.D. James

When Nurse Pearce died within the gloomy precincts of the Nightingale Training College the situation looked grim enough. Then a second young nurse is found dead and suddenly Chief Superintendent Adam Dalgliesh finds himself caught in a deadly web of intrigue, corruption and murder.

  • Sales Rank: #3981135 in Books
  • Published on: 1993
  • Format: CD-ROM
  • Binding: Audio CD

Review
'The greatest contemporary writer of classic crime.' Peter Kemp, Sunday Times 'P. D. James is one of the national treasures of British fiction... Each new book gives pleasure not just for macabre crimes or ingenious solutions but its density of experience.' Malcolm Bradbury, Mail on Sunday 'Unlike so many crime writers, James still has the power to move, fascinate and astonish.' Independent 'James... manages to invest even a simple mystery novel with a depth and intelligence that few in her trade can match.' The Times

About the Author
P. D. James served in the forensic and criminal justice departments of the Home Office until her retirement in 1979. She was made a Life Peer in 1991. Her many detective novels include Original Sin, A Certain Justice and Death in Holy Orders.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Book One: Demonstration of Death

I

On the morning of the first murder Miss Muriel Beale, Inspector of Nurse Training Schools to the General Nursing Council, stirred into wakefulness soon after six o’clock and into a sluggish early morning awareness that it was Monday, 12th January, and the day of the John Carpendar Hospital inspection. Already she had half registered the first familiar sounds of a new day: Angela’s alarm silenced almost before she was conscious of hearing it; Angela herself padding and snuffling about the flat like a clumsy but benevolent animal; the agreeably anticipatory tinkling of early tea in preparation. She forced open her eyelids, resisting an insidious urge to wriggle down into the enveloping warmth of the bed and let her mind drift again into blessed unconsciousness. What on earth had prompted her to tell Matron Taylor that she would arrive shortly after nine a.m. in time to join the third-year students’ first teaching session of the day? It was ridiculously, unnecessarily early. The hospital was in Heatheringfield on the Sussex/Hampshire border, a drive of nearly fifty miles, some of which would have to be done before daybreak. And it was raining, as it had rained with dreary insistence for the past week. She could hear the faint hiss of car tyres on the Cromwell Road and an occasional spatter against the window-pane. Thank God she had taken the trouble to check the map of Heatheringfield to find out exactly where the hospital lay. A developing market town, particularly if it were unfamiliar, could be a time-wasting maze to the motorist in the snarl of commuter traffic on a wet Monday morning. She felt instinctively that it was going to be a difficult day and stretched out under the bedclothes as if bracing herself to meet it. Extending her cramped fingers, she half relished the sharp momentary ache of her stretched joints. A touch of arthritis there. Well, it was to be expected. She was forty-nine after all. It was time she took life a little more gently. What on earth had led her to think she could get to Heatheringfield before half past nine?

The door opened, letting in a shaft of light from the passage. Miss Angela Burrows jerked back the curtains, surveyed the black January sky and the rain-spattered window and jerked them together again. “It’s raining,” she said with the gloomy relish of one who has prophesied rain and who cannot be held responsible for the ignoring of her warning. Miss Beale propped herself on her elbow, turned on the bedside lamp, and waited. In a few seconds her friend returned and set down the early morning tray. The tray cloth was of stretched embroidered linen, the flowered cups were arranged with their handles aligned, the four biscuits on the matching plate were precisely placed, two of a kind, the teapot gave forth a delicate smell of freshly made Indian tea. The two women had a strong love of comfort and an addiction to tidiness and order. The standards which they had once enforced in the private ward of their teaching hospital were applied to their own comfort, so that life in the flat was not unlike that in an expensive and permissive nursing home.

Miss Beale had shared a flat with her friend since they had both left the same training school twenty-five years ago. Miss Angela Burrows was the Principal Tutor at a London teaching hospital. Miss Beale had thought her the paradigm of nurse tutors and, in all her inspections, subconsciously set her standard by her friend’s frequent pronouncements on the principles of sound nurse teaching. Miss Burrows, for her part, wondered how the General Nursing Council would manage when the time came for Miss Beale to retire.

The happiest marriages are sustained by such comforting illusions and Miss Beale’s and Miss Burrows’s very different, but essentially innocent, relationship was similarly founded. Except in this capacity for mutual but unstated admiration they were very different. Miss Burrows was sturdy, thick-set and formidable, hiding a vulnerable sensitivity under an air of blunt common sense. Miss Beale was small and birdlike, precise in speech and movement and threatened with an out-of-date gentility which sometimes brought her close to being thought ridiculous. Even their physiological habits were different. The heavy Miss Burrows awoke to instantaneous life at the first sound of her alarm, was positively energetic until teatime, then sank into sleepy lethargy as the evening advanced. Miss Beale daily opened her gummed eyelids with reluctance, had to force herself into early morning activity and became more brightly cheerful as the day wore on. They had managed to reconcile even this incompatibility. Miss Burrows was happy to brew the early morning tea and Miss Beale washed up after dinner and made the nightly cocoa.

Miss Burrows poured out both cups of tea, dropped two lumps of sugar in her friend’s cup and took her own to the chair by the window. Early training forbade Miss Burrows to sit on the bed. She said: “You need to be off early. I’d better run your bath. When does it start?”

Miss Beale muttered feebly that she had told Matron that she would arrive as soon as possible after nine o’clock. The tea was blessedly sweet and reviving. The promise to start out so early was a mistake but she began to think that she might after all make it by nine-fifteen.

“That’s Mary Taylor, isn’t it? She’s got quite a reputation considering she’s only a provincial matron. Extraordinary that she’s never come to London. She didn’t even apply for our job when Miss Montrose retired.” Miss Beale muttered incomprehensibly, which, since they had had this conversation before, her friend correctly interpreted as a protest that London wasn’t everybody’s choice and that people were too apt to assume that nothing remarkable ever came out of the provinces.

“There’s that, of course,” conceded her friend. “And the John Carpendar’s in a very pleasant part of the world. I like that country on the Hampshire border. It’s a pity you’re not visiting it in the summer. Still, it’s not as if she’s matron of a major teaching hospital. With her ability she easily could be: she might have become one of the Great Matrons.” In their student days she and Miss Beale had suffered at the hands of one of the Great Matrons but they never ceased to lament the passing of that terrifying breed.

“By the way, you’d better start in good time. The road’s up just before you strike the Guildford by-pass.”

Miss Beale did not inquire how she knew that the road was up. It was the sort of thing Miss Burrows invariably did know. The hearty voice went on:

“I saw Hilda Rolfe, their Principal Tutor, in the Westminster Library this week. Extraordinary woman! Intelligent, of course, and reputedly a first-class teacher, but I imagine she terrifies the students.”

Miss Burrows frequently terrified her own students, not to mention most of her colleagues on the teaching staff, but would have been amazed to be told it. Miss Beale asked:

“Did she say anything about the inspection?"

“Just mentioned it. She was only returning a book and was in a hurry so we didn’t talk long. Apparently they’ve got a bad attack of influenza in the school and half her staff are off with it.”

Miss Beale thought it odd that the Principal Tutor should find time to visit London to return a library book if staffing problems were so difficult, but she didn’t say so. Before breakfast Miss Beale reserved her energy for thought rather than speech. Miss Burrows came round the bed to pour out the second cups. She said:

“What with this weather and with half the training staff off sick, it looks as if you’re in for a pretty dull day.”

As the two friends were to tell each other for years to come, with the cosy predilection for re-stating the obvious which is one of the pleasures of long intimacy, she could hardly have been more wrong. Miss Beale, expecting nothing worse of the day than a tedious drive, an arduous inspection, and a possible tussle with those members of the Hospital Nurse Education Committee who took the trouble to attend, dragged her dressing-gown around her shoulders, stubbed her feet into her bedroom slippers and shuffled off to the bathroom. She had taken the first steps on her way to witness a murder.


From the Paperback edition.

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
They don't come any better!
By Late Night Reader
Dame P.D. James never put a foot wrong with her many Adam Dalgleish books. Every word, every phrase, is carefully chosen to
make the reader turn the pages way into the night. She and Superintendent Dalglish delved into many phases of British life,
the Church, Medicine, Monastery life, business, publishing, Law, etc. and in this books (my personal favorite) she reveals the
world of the Nursing School students and instructors. The early-on murder, seemingly without any motivation, opens the doors to
so many possibilities and I challenge readers to unmask the culprit until the very end. She is never pedantic, her writing is
readable while also being instructive. Dame Phyllis passed away last year at the age of 93 or 94, and will be greatly missed. She
has been called the best writer in the mystery genre, and rumor has it members the British Royal family enjoy her books.
Her final mystery "The Private Patient" is also well worth reading. HIGHLY recommended. She never wrote a bad book.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
I love all of her books.
By Deanna Weaver
This was about the murders of two young student nurses. There was no obvious connection between them until much later in the book. The writing of the author is very good and keeps you intrigued until the end. Highly recommended for those who love British mysteries.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Shroud for a Nightengale
By Frederick J. Murphy
PD James is a gem of a writer. She truly raised the detective story to fine literature The plot and the characters are complex, clever and well etched. Adam Dalgliesh, PD's detective , is fascinating.
This genre doesn't get better than this.

See all 122 customer reviews...

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Kamis, 25 Desember 2014

~~ Ebook Free Certification Review for PeriAnesthesia Nursing, 2e, by ASPAN, Theresa Clifford, Denise O'Brien BSN RN CPAN CAPA

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Certification Review for PeriAnesthesia Nursing, 2e, by ASPAN, Theresa Clifford, Denise O'Brien BSN  RN  CPAN  CAPA

Written by the American Society of PeriAnesthesia Nurses (ASPAN) ― the leading organization for perianesthesia nursing education, practice, standards and research ― this book is the only question-based CAPA and CPAN exam review available. All 700 questions include comprehensive rationales and are individually referenced to current research. This review/practice tool provides you with the core knowledge, essential skills, and fundamental principles integral to perianesthesia nursing practice.

  • Case study and clinical application questions help you prepare for in-hospital or ambulatory certification.
  • Questions are written at different levels of difficulty throughout, with a strong emphasis on application.
  • Case-based scenarios help you apply your knowledge and challenge your understanding of perianesthesia clinical practice.
  • Detailed rationales are provided for every question, ensuring that you understand why answers are correct or incorrect.
  • Each question is referenced to up-to-date research and key resources, making it easy to locate necessary resources based on your own study plan.
  • UNIQUE! This review is based on the latest CPAN and CAPA examination blueprints, ensuring that you are fully prepared for what you will face on these examinations.
  • All questions are revised or completely new to reflect the latest standards of practice.

  • Sales Rank: #685161 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-01-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: .59" h x 7.30" w x 10.16" l, 1.35 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 368 pages

Most helpful customer reviews

23 of 24 people found the following review helpful.
If you plan on being certified
By bedilia
I have found this book an invaluable tool in studying for the CPAN certification exam. It is also a great teaching tool for new PACU nurses and for seasoned nurses working in PACU. I would recommend this book for anyone interested in expanding their knowledge base in PACU.

12 of 12 people found the following review helpful.
Great preparation for CPAN
By Julie A. Osterhout
I highly recommend this reference for anyone studying for certification in perianesthesia nursing. Although I did use other references to increase my knowledge in areas of my weaknesses, I found that reading through this book twice, as well as studying the Standards of Care for Perianesthesia Nurses, prepared me to pass the test. The question-answer- rational format helped geer me toward finding in the question what was needed in choosing the correct answer, when two answers seemed close. This is a real key in passing these types of difficult exams. Good luck!

13 of 13 people found the following review helpful.
Certification Review for Perianesthesia Nursing
By SMC
Extremely helpful when studying for CPAN. This also good to use as a review to keep current.

See all 27 customer reviews...

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Senin, 22 Desember 2014

~~ Download Heaven (Christian Growth Study Plan) [Workbook], by Randy Alcorn

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Heaven (Christian Growth Study Plan) [Workbook], by Randy Alcorn

Heaven by Randy Alcorn is a fascinating, easy-to-read study that will help every believer in Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord find an anchor for present faithfulness, celebrate the loving provisions God has made for His children, and convey to others a love for God and His home. A Leader Guide in the back of the Member Book. (6 sessions).

  • Sales Rank: #77106 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: LifeWay Press
  • Published on: 2006-12-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.50" h x .35" w x 7.10" l, .62 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 160 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

From Publishers Weekly
According to Alcorn (The Treasure Principle; Deadline; Safely Home), the subject of heaven rates as one of the least accurately discussed subjects in the whole of Christendom. Even seminarians fail to give appropriate time and attention to heaven as described throughout the Bible because other themes take pre-eminence both chronologically and preferentially. Alcorn is likewise astounded that the majority of Christians who do take time to consider heaven often possess faulty, nonbiblical assumptions, one of the most common being the misconception of heaven as a place of unending church services. The author, who is also the founder of the nonprofit organization Eternal Perspective Ministries (EPM), has spent years studying what the Bible says about heaven, and in this compelling and comprehensive resource, he offers every conceivable question about heaven, or the "New Earth," as a Christian believer's ultimate destination. Alcorn answers the expected queries on heavenly life as well as quirkier ones: will Christians drink coffee in heaven? Will there be homeownership, and what about sex? Will our pets be in heaven? Evangelical scholars and laypersons alike will appreciate Alcorn's expansive—though perhaps long-winded—musings on this neglected subject, a real boon in a time when many people are eager to understand what happens after death.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From the Inside Flap
Have you ever wondered . . .

What is Heaven really going to be like?
What will we look like?
What will we do every day?
Won't Heaven get boring after a while?

We all have questions about what Heaven will be like, and after twenty-five years of extensive research, Dr. Randy Alcorn has the answers.

In the most comprehensive and definitive book on Heaven to date, Randy invites you to picture Heaven the way Scripture describes it-a bright, vibrant, and physical New Earth, free from sin, suffering, and death, and brimming with Christ's presence, wondrous natural beauty, and the richness of human culture as God intended it.

God has put eternity in our hearts. Now, Randy Alcorn brings eternity to light in a way that will surprise you, spark your imagination, and change how you live today.

If you've always thought of Heaven as a realm of disembodied spirits, clouds, and eternal harp strumming, you're in for a wonderful surprise.

This is a book about real people with real bodies enjoying close relationships with God and each other, eating, drinking, working, playing, traveling, worshiping, and discovering on a New Earth. Earth as God created it. Earth as he intended it to be.

And the next time you hear someone say, "We can't begin to imagine what Heaven will be like," you will be able to tell them, ""I can.""

From the Back Cover
The next time you hear someone say, "We can't begin to imagine what Heaven will be like," tell them, ""I can.""

Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Every Real Christian Should Read This Book
By Joseph Heng
This is a must read book for any true Christian. As Randy outlines in his book, how can we be excited about everlasting life with God the Father, Jesus His Son, and the Holy Spirit without understanding what that life will entail. I have read this book 3 times now. Every time it gets me excited about my life after death and I truly am looking forward to it.

It is sad in this fallen world that most Christians don't have an understanding of our life after death. Randy had outlined this in Biblical terms and they are accurate. Sad that most people die today and have no understanding of life after death. The "Good News" is not just that we can be saved, but what that salvation looks like. Terrible that millions/billions of people are dying in fear including Christians. A Christian death should be celebrated because they are in the intermediate Heaven with Jesus. Many "Christian" funerals I go to are so sad and the sadness is for us because we won't see them for awhile. But it should be joyous as we know if we are true Christians we will see them again....FOREVER!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
AN IMMENSELY DETAILED BODY OF IDEAS OF WHAT HEAVEN WILL BE LIKE
By Steven H Propp
Author Randy Alcorn wrote in the Preface to this 2004 book, “We [Christians] have failed to explore and explain the Bible’s magnificent teachings about Heaven. No wonder a flood of unbiblical thinking has rushed in to fill the vacuum…. The truth is, in our seminaries, churches, and families, we have given amazingly little attention to the place where we will live forever with Christ and his people---the New Earth, in the new universe. This eternal Heaven is the central subject of this book… Many things in this book will be new even to readers who are veteran students of Scripture… They may appear to be adding to or misinterpreting Scripture, when in fact they are simply portraying what Scripture has said all along but we’ve failed to grasp.” (Pg. xiii-xiv) [NOTE: page numbers refer to the 533-page hardcover edition.]

He further explains, “Nearly every notion of Heaven I present in this book was stimulated and reinforced by biblical texts. Though some of my interpretations and speculations are no doubt mistaken, they are not baseless. Rightly or wrongly, I have drawn most of them from my understanding of the explicit and implicit teachings of Scripture. Discussions of Heaven tend to be either hyperimaginative or utterly unimaginative… both approaches are inadequate and dangerous. What we need is a biblically inspired imagination.” (Pg. 16-17)

Before getting to Heaven, however, he first cautions, “Heaven is NOT our default destination. No one goes there automatically. Unless our sin problem is resolved, the only place we will go is our true default destination….Hell.” (Pg. 23) He adds, “Hell will be agonizingly dull, small, insignificant, without company, purpose, or accomplishment… As the new universe moves gloriously onward, Hell and its occupants will exist in utter inactivity and insignificance, an eternal non-life of regret and---perhaps---diminishing personhood.” (Pg. 27-28)

He asserts, “When we die believers in Christ will not go to the Heaven where we’ll live forever. Instead, we’ll go to an intermediate Heaven. In that Heaven---where those who died covered by Christ’s blood are now---we’ll await the time of Christ’s return to the earth, our bodily resurrection, the final judgment, and the creation of the new heavens and New Earth.” (Pg. 42) He argues, “there is no such thing as ‘soul sleep,’ or a long period of unconsciousness between life on Earth and life in Heaven… The spirit’s departure from the body ends our existence on Earth. The physical part of us ‘sleeps’ until the resurrection, while the spiritual part of us relocates to a conscious existence in Heaven… Every reference in Revelation to human beings talking and worshiping in Heaven prior to the resurrection of the dead demonstrates that our spirit beings are conscious, not sleeping, after death… it’s not clear how disembodied beings COULD sleep, because sleeping involves a physical body.” (Pg. 46-47)

He explains that he think that Heaven “might be a physical place”: “The physical New Earth will be our ultimate dwelling place, but until then we shouldn’t find it surprising if God chooses to provide a waiting place that’s also physical… as human beings, we occupy space. It seems reasonable to infer that the space we occupy would be physical… Why are we so resistant to the idea that Heaven could be physical? The answer… is centered in an unbiblical belief that the spirit realm is good and the material world is bad, a view I am calling ‘Christoplatonism.’ (Pg. 51-52) Later, he clarifies, “This philosophy has blended elements of Platonism with Christianity, and in so doing has poisoned Christianity and blunted its distinct differences from Eastern religions.” (Pg. 475)

He suggests that “Conversion does not mean eliminating the old but transforming it… we remain who we are. We have the same history, appearance, memory, interests, and skills. This is the principle of ‘redemptive continuity’… The New Earth will still be Earth, but a changed Earth… so too the world will be reborn in continuity with the old world…” (Pg. 114-115)

He provides a great deal of ideas about what Heaven will be like: the original Garden of Eden may be in the New Jerusalem (pg. 56-57); animals [including predators] will neither harm nor destroy (pg. 130); “nature, animals, paintings, books, or a baseball bat might be resurrected” (pg. 135); “there will be no church services in Heaven” (pg. 196); “we’ll be different in positions of service… God will give us permanent management positions on the New Earth” (pg. 220); the New Jerusalem will allow to “enjoy the arts, music, and sports without pickpockets, porn shops, drugs, or prostitution” (pg. 253); “the New Earth will have large bodies of water” (pg. 275); “some people will wear jeans, shorts, T-shirts, polo shirts, or flip-flops” (pg. 296); “we’ll eat at feasts with Christ in an earthly kingdom” (pg. 302); he adds, Cold God make it so our ne bodies wouldn’t go through the same digestive and elimination processes they do now? Certainly. Will he? We don’t know. But no aspect of our God-created physiology can be bad.” (Pg. 305)

He speculates, “Those who for reasons of allergies, weight problems, or addictions can’t regularly consume peanuts, chocolate, coffee, and wine---and countless other foods and drinks---may look forward to enjoying them on the New Earth… we’ll enjoy more pleasures, not fewer.” (Pg. 309) “Will we study doctrine in Heaven? … We will have eternity to explore it… On the New Earth… biology zoology chemistry, astronomy, physics---all will the study of God.” (Pg. 321) “Some old books may be republished in the New Jerusalem” (pg. 326); “I believe we will likely need [sleep] AND enjoy it” (pg. 330); “The continuity of our resurrection minds and bodies argues that we’ll have no trouble recognizing each other” (pg. 346); “We’ll have greater marital intimacy with Jesus than we ever had in the best earthly marriages” (pg. 353); “Perhaps in Heaven many people will meet their children who were aborted or their children who dies in miscarriages” (pg. 356).

He asks soberly, “So how could we enjoy Heaven knowing that a loved one is in Hell?... In Heaven, we will see with a new and far better perspective. We’ll fully concur with God’s judgment on the wicked… We’ll never question God’s justice, wondering how he could send good people to Hell. Rather, we’ll be overwhelmed with his grace, marveling at what he did to send bad people to Heaven. (We will no longer have any illusion that fallen people are good without Christ.)… in a sense, none of our loved ones will be in Hell---only some whom we ONCE loved.” (Pg. 367-368)

He states that we will have ethnic and national identities (pg. 376); “God will likely again restore a common language” (pg. 378); there will be animals, under our care (pg. 392); of dinosaurs, ‘behemoth,’ and ‘leviathan,’ he asks, ‘Why shouldn’t all people have the opportunity to enjoy these great wonders of God on the New Earth?” (pg. 399); some people “may continue with work similar to what they do now, whether as gardeners, engineers, builders, artists, animal trainers, musicians, scientists, craftspeople… A significant difference will be that they’ll work without the hindrances of toil, pain, corruption, and sin.” (Pg. 413) He says, “Some researchers suggest that we now use only 10 percent of our brainpower. Adam and Eve could likely use 10 percent of theirs---and their brainpower was probably far greater than ours.” (Pg. 417)

He continues, “Scripture songs will endure, but other music from Earth may also be preserved… Although some lyrics will require theological corrections, others will be suitable as is, ready to be sung in God’s presence… Will secular songs survive? Not if they dishonor Christ… Which of your favorite songs will survive?... As a musical novice, I might compose something worthy of Bach. And what kind of music do you suppose Bach will compose?” (Pg. 420) “Just as we can look forward to cultural endeavors such as art, drama, and music on the New Earth, we can assume that we’ll also enjoy sports there” (pg. 426); “What should we expect to find on the New Earth? Tables, chairs, cabinets, wagons, machinery, transportation, sports equipment, and much more” (pg. 445).

He acknowledges, “Does this sound speculative? I imagine it only because of Scripture’s own words. I base my observation on the texts I’ve cited here and elsewhere in this book. I didn’t begin with a vivid imagination of Heaven---exactly the opposite. I studied the Scriptures about Heaven. Only over the years, over the decades, did they infuse my imagination.” (Pg. 383) He states, for example, that we will laugh in Heaven on the basis of Luke 6:23: ‘Rejoice in that day and leap for joy, because great is your reward in heaven.’” (Pg. 424)

Certainly, Alcorn’s visions and speculations sound wonderful; his exegetical basis for some of these ideas, however, is sometimes perhaps a bit skimpy. But for anyone wanting a book overflowing with ideas about what Heaven might be like, this book will be very warmly welcomed.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Inspiring and Comforting
By savvy reviews
I read this book with a box of tissues for tears, and a Bible to check correctness. A touching and comforting read. Eye-opening. Randy Alcorn has compiled a credible description of heaven, taking Scriptural verses from throughout the Bible and drawing logical and insightful suppositions that ring true. I really am looking forward to heaven and all that awaits us--not boring, but real life-- beyond the best we have ever experienced here, or imagined might be There. Good reading, and nice to think about, making these days here on earth more meaningful, and full of anticipation for even better things to come.

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