Pages: 304 (Paperback) ISBN: 0349118698 Pub: Abacus Pub date: 2005-06-13 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 6737
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Reader Reviews:Gentle and thought-provoking (2/2 people found this helpful)I've only recently sampled this McCall Smith series having found the Number 1 Ladies Detective Series too twee for my tastes. The heroine of the Philosophy Club series, Isabel Dalhousie, is a charming and interesting character who engages the reader to care about what happens in her life. The story-lines have several strands: her personal life; her amateur sleuthing; and her occupation as an editor of a philosophy journal. This last theme allows the author to explore aspects of moral philosophy and ethics (his own professional background). In the past I've tended to find writings about philosophy tedious, but the way the author incorporates philosophical issues into the fabric of these stories makes the ideas come alive. For those of us who know Edinburgh, reading about all the familiar streets and shops gives added pleasure. This is not a book based on realistic crime detection, such as Ian Rankin's Rebus series: it's more in the Simon Brett/ Agatha Christie camp. Rather boring... (1/2 people found this helpful)This was the first book I had read by Alexander McCall Smith and it hasn't made me want to read another! After finishing the 281 pages of this book I felt that it could have almost been condensed into a short story. Isobel Dalhousie is the main character of the novel. She is a middle aged woman, a philosopher who plays amateur detective after seeing a young man plunge to his death at a concert they had both attended. The story laboured through Isobel's suspicions of whether the death may have been accidental or was the young man pushed. That is the story in a nutshell and I found the book to be quite pretentious, long & drawn-out and although I did manage to finish it, I wouldn't want to read another book by this author. The Same But Different? (3/3 people found this helpful)I bought this book as a fan of McCall Smith's No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency series of novels, as no doubt many others did. Anyone expecting a rehash of No. 1, but with a Scottish location, will be disappointed, And whilst the main character, Isabel, is not as engaging as her No. 1 counterpart, she has grown on me.
How Dull (7/9 people found this helpful)I am a great fan of the NO1 Ladies Detective Agency series by Alexander so I was eager to start this new series.
A gentle read, perfect for rainy Sunday afternoons (4/4 people found this helpful)The Sunday Philosophy Club is the beginning of a new series featuring the middle-aged and single Isabel Dalhousie. I'm going to confess right from the start that I did not take to Isabel as a character. In part, this is because I found that she rather stretched belief. She's an independently wealthy, middle-aged woman (who married the love of her life, only to be left by him) who has retained her looks but who isn't pursuing a relationship and who also happens to be a philosopher. I don't doubt that there are women like this in real life, but it is an awful lot to take in in what's actually quite a short book (coming in at just under 300 pages) and I did think that McCall Smith leveraged in the backstory with her lover John Liamor a little too obviously. Given that this is to be a series, I think that some of the backstory could have been alluded to so as to give the reader the idea that there's more to come before being drawn out in later novels. As it is, I'm not sure that there's enough left to discover about Isabel that would keep me reading.
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