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Publish and Be Murdered

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Amiss is unhappy with his job managing a right-wing, 200-year old English magazine. And when the deputy editor is found drowned in a bowl of punch, suspicions of foul play are brushed aside by the police. But after another death, it appears that something wicked is at play among the magazine staff.

Amiss is unhappy with his job managing a right-wing, 200-year old English magazine, for the atmosphere is poisoned with egocentricity. And when the deputy editor is found drowned in a bowl of punch, suspicions of foul play are brushed aside by the police. But after another death, it appears that something wicked is at play among the magazine staff...

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 4, 1999
      In his seventh outing, Robert Amiss, lapsed civil servant, is approached by Lord Papworth, owner of the Wrangler, to step in as business manager for the august journal and do something about its steady drain on his lordship's finances. The magazine's editor, Willie Lambie Crump, and his staff are firmly mired in the 1950s, technologically speaking; ideologically, the journal has always been strongly conservative. Prodded by Baroness "Jack" Troutbeck, his rather menacing guardian angel, Amiss takes on the job and soon has his hands full trying to further the journal's progress toward the latter half of the 20th century without unduly upsetting the staff. When the political editor, Henry Potbury, is found dead under odd circumstances and Crump is murdered, Amiss discovers once again that trying to keep a job can be a lethal occupation. Edwards's (Clubbed to Death, etc.) wit should be registered as a deadly weapon. This longtime contributor to the Economist takes no prisoners in yet another savagely funny satire on journalism, politics and antiquated manners.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      THE WRANGLER, a venerable British journal of Conservative thought and opinion, loses pots of money annually, draining the estate of its owner, Lord Papworth. His Lordship hires our hero, Robert Amiss, to encourage the journal's eccentric band of writers and editors toward efficiency. The editor and deputy editor are soon dead, victims of foul play and/or inebriation. Bill Wallis's outstanding performance brings each of the characters vividly to life. Wallis never falters, whether delivering an editor's upper-class lisp and honking laugh or a policeman's straight-ahead speech. In addition to the perfectly individualized voices, Wallis's appropriate pace and delivery put the listener in every scene of this most amusing mystery. R.E.K. (c) AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine

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