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Reviews for General math 1

 General math 1 magazine reviews

The average rating for General math 1 based on 2 reviews is 2.5 stars.has a rating of 2.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2017-12-26 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Michael Seaton
The body in the clay… The prestigious old firm of Shentall's Potteries has a problem - it seems someone may be leaking its designs, allowing counterfeiters to flood the market with cheap copies. The current head of the firm, Luke Shentall, has his suspicions of who is guilty, so calls in a private investigator to find proof, or alternatively to prove someone else is the culprit. It's the investigator, Nicholson, who tells us the story, and he starts in the middle with the discovery of a body in the ark, a vault in which the liquid clay is stored… This is a very different take on the traditional detective story. The narration gives it something of the style of the noir first-person private eye stories of the US, but without the true noir feel. Nicholson (we never learn his first name) is indeed a man with his own sorrows, somewhat world-weary but still with the ability to believe in the good in people. The other characters however are all fundamentally decent even if they each have their flaws, so that the effectiveness of the story comes from the fact that quite soon neither Nicholson nor the reader really wants any of them to be the guilty party. And especially we want Corinna Wakefield, Luke's suspect, to be innocent - the reader because she quickly gains our sympathy and liking; Nicholson because he increasingly finds himself developing a deep attraction to her. The quality of the writing is wonderful; this could as easily be read as literary fiction as crime. Kelly paints a full and affectionate portrait of the landscape and culture of the Staffordshire area and its traditional pottery industry, showing how the old methods and family-run businesses are gradually giving way to newer techniques, more cost efficient, perhaps, and certainly cleaner than the old coal-fired kilns, but also more impersonal. Shentall's is one of the old firms, and while Luke has introduced up-to-date machinery and equipment, he works hard to retain the traditional atmosphere and values of this being a family concern - not just his own family, but his employees also passing their skills down through the generations, father to son, mother to daughter. This is partly why his suspicions have fallen on Corinna - as a talented designer, she has been brought in from the outside, and Luke can't bring himself to believe that his long-term employees, many of whom worked for his father and even his grandfather before him, could betray the firm. Kelly shows the soot-blackened buildings, the constantly-burning furnaces that can be seen from the older coal-fired kilns day and night, the pit, known as Etruria, where Wedgwood's factory once stood, now the site of an iron works. These could easily be made visions of an industrial hell, but Kelly shows them as having a kind of dark beauty and as the beating heart of this community whose existence is inextricably linked with the potteries that provide their pay and their purpose. I stared down into the pit, at the black buildings silhouetted against the flushed sky, buildings, some of them, flickering within, as if a river of liquid gold were rolling through them. Clouds of steam and smoke drifted across the shadowy vale, rosy steam, lit from the fires below. There was a continuous hollow rushing sound, broken by clanks of shunting. An engine, raised on a bank, black and red, like a slide, moved slowly backwards and forwards. The whole pit seemed to breathe as it worked; for though it was past midnight on Saturday, and the Newcastle neighbours' windows were dark, naked lights on gantries and signals glittered all over Etruria. The plot is divided into three sections: the first, a short one describing the finding of the body, though we aren't given the victim's identity at this early stage; then two long sections, one set before the finding of the body and one after. Because of the more literary, descriptive prose style it took me a little longer than usual to settle in, but once I had I became completely involved in the slow playing out of the story and in the characters that Kelly creates so well - not just the main players, but the other members of the staff and workers of the pottery, each of whom has their own part to play. The mystery is rather secondary to Nicholson's growing dilemma - his distaste for the job grows as his feelings for Corinna deepen, and his initial pretence of befriending her so he can get close to her feels sordid now that he discovers he would like to be more than her friend. But he's a hired hand and must do his best for Luke, and it seems more and more that, innocent or guilty, Corinna is at the heart of the mystery. I thought this was great, and the ending, when it came, arose perfectly from the characterisation and motivations Kelly had so carefully and subtly built throughout. Shall I admit that it actually made me cry, just a little? Not a thing that happens often, especially in crime novels. A travesty that this one should ever have been allowed to become "forgotten" - Martin Edwards refers to it as her "masterpiece" and for once that word seems perfectly chosen to me. www.fictionfanblog.wordpress.com
Review # 2 was written on 2015-06-14 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 2 stars Walter Cordova
Mary Kelly's The Spoilt Kill beat out John le Carre's Call for the Dead for the Gold Dagger Award in 1961, and now I know why. This book is exquisitely written, with a totally character-driven plot in a fully realized workplace setting (a commercial pottery). The detective is undercover on a case of industrial espionage and the pottery's accountant is found murdered by, well, let's just say by clay. But this is one of those books that is about far more than its mystery. I'll excerpt one sample for you. "...But you heard what Dart said. "You have to have these things." Have to. Obligation. England the great mercantile nation, rolling in prosperity, measures poverty against a new list of basic possessions. And it's no long a pity to be poor, a misfortune, it's a disgrace, a stigma, a reflection on your character, a condition you daren't permit to be seen, like syphilis. Perhaps I exaggerate." No, he doesn't. Who says we need that enormous TV, that flashy car, that McMansion? That is a passage that could have been written today and be just as true now as it was then. The sheer pettiness of the motive for the espionage rings horribly true. Be aware, this is not a light-hearted read and there is no HEA, but on a level of craft it reads as well as le Carre himself ever did. I especially recommend it to my writing friends. N.B.: I will say this and no more in criticism [SPOILER]: Nicholson is meant to have been disappointed in love at the end, but my feeling is he really dodged a bullet there.


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