ChatterBank1 min ago
Recommend A British Detective/Police Procedural Series Of Books, Please
Not necessarily a detective as the prime character, could be the pathologist, the serial killer or anyone involved in a long running crime series.
Must be British, though, and I don't mind if they are brutally gory or not.
Thank you
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by barry1010. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.barry, If a friend of mine came on Answerbank she would recommend Susan Hill and her Simon Serrailler series.
There are 12 books in the series, the 12th will be published on 5th Oct.
Below is copied from a website to give you an idea of what they're about.
Susan Hill’s Simon Serrailler novels are in a league of their own – literate, detailed, and full of drama – standing head and shoulders above the majority of crime novels.
At their heart is a very English setting, the idyllic fictional cathedral town of Lafferton, and a very English Detective, Chief Superintendent Serrailler, in the pursuit of classic whodunits. But there’s nothing old-fashioned about the crimes and nothing cosy about the lives of the characters, including Serrailler’s.
Thank you, all. cashier, I'm not really bothered about the nationality of the author as long as the plot is set in the UK (or Ireland) and doesn't have US spellings. I'm currently reading a book set in Australia but have to use the dictionary a lot , it frustrates me.
I've enjoyed a lot of books set in Scotland (not just The Broons and Oor Wullie) and McDermid, Rankin and McBride are among my favourite authors.
Thanks again everyone for the suggestions.
Not a detective series, but written from a village policeman's perspective (narrative voice), from time to time P C Rhea goes into police procedural matters.
Lighthearted and very amusing at times.
Amazon.co.uk User Recommendationref=ku_mi_rw_edp_ku
As others have said:-
Sayers - Peter Wimsey; the Morse sequence; I'm actually enjoying the Richard Osman TTMC series (a bit light, but fun). Val McDiarmid is a MUST. P.D. James 'Adam Dalgleith' novels (she's good, whatever she writes). Sherlock Holmes - Conan-Doyle (read in order) ---so many. Frances Brody's 'Kate Shackleton' mysteries are modern, but set in the 'Golden Age' and are intriguing and well-written (I did catch her out on a character ordering a gill of milk for a full day for several people) I recommend her, nevertheless.
Hope this helps.
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