Liza Cody’s Dupe ought to be a controversial inclusion for Patti Abbott’s Forgotten Friday series. True, it’s almost thirty years since the book appeared, in 1980, but it won the John Creasey Memorial Dagger for best debut crime novel of the year, and it introduced us not only to a fine author, but also to a fine character, the private eye Anna Lee.
Anna is an appealing character: youthful, a bit frustrated, and currently bottom in the pecking order at Brierley Security, Private Investigations. When the bereaved parents of Deirdre Jackson approach Brierley Security, wanting to know more about the car crash that killed their daughter, it doesn’t seem like a great job, so naturally it goes to Anna. But as she investigates the down-at-heel film business in which Deirdre worked, she discovers that there was more to the death than met the eye. The title of the book, naturally, has a double meaning.
This was one of those books I read in the eighties, and from which I sought a bit of inspiration, when I was thinking about what it took to write a fresh new mystery series. I liked Cody’s crisp, economical style of writing, the plausible way in which Anna and her colleagues were depicted, and the evocative way in which she depicted Anna Lee’s London. These qualities are enduring strengths of her work, and it was no surprise when the Anna Lee series was adapted for television. With that excellent actor Imogen Stubbs in the title role, it should have been a winner. But somehow the mix didn’t work, and Liza seems to have become disillusioned with the Anna Lee series. It’s a long time since this appealing character last appeared.
Happily, Liza Cody continues to write novels and short stories (she also co-edited three volumes of the CWA anthology before I took over the editorship), although these appear less frequently than in the past. She is not by any means a forgotten author, and Dupe definitely should not be a forgotten book.
Friday 2 October 2009
Forgotten Book - Dupe
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8 comments:
Definitely! I, too, recall reading this novel with great enjoyment when it appeared. I hoped for a continuing series; but the author went off on 'a frolic of her own'. Fair enough ... but not quite what I expected. However, yes, she does deserve plentiful recognition - so bravo for this post.
Sounds interesting. I think I might try to find a copy.
Thanks for this Forgotten Books entry : ). I, too, like economical dialogue and plausible character depictions, and I'd, well, forgotten about this book. I'm going to have to dig it out and reread it.
Well, well.
My review of today should prove that Anna Lee is not quite forgotten. Not even in Scandinavia.
I saw the TV series and enjoyed Imogen Stubbs so when I found the complete series at a sale, I just couldn´t resist it.
I still have my paperback of this one. Good stuff!
I'm not familiar with "Dupe." In fact, I don't think I've read anything by Lee. Thanks for the tip...
Elizabeth
Mystery Writing is Murder
Thanks for these comments. I'm glad to find fellow Liza Cody/Anna Lee fans. I should add that I also enjoyed the very different 'Bucket Nut' very much.
Just found your review of Dupe after I posted my own. It's sad that this fine mystery has gone a bit forgotten.
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