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David Ashton (1) (1941–)

Author of Shadow of the Serpent

For other authors named David Ashton, see the disambiguation page.

27 Works 363 Members 15 Reviews

Series

Works by David Ashton

Shadow of the Serpent (2006) 110 copies, 6 reviews
A Trick of the Light (2009) 57 copies
Fall from Grace (2007) 56 copies, 1 review
Nor Will He Sleep (2013) 24 copies, 1 review
End of the Line (2011) 6 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1941-11-10
Gender
male
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Greenock, Scotland, UK
Education
Central School of Speech and Drama
Occupations
actor
writer
Short biography
David Ashton (born 10 November 1941 in Greenock) is a Scottish actor and writer. Trained at the Central School of Speech and Drama in London, 1964–67, he has acted in a wide variety of film, television, theatre and radio roles. He has also developed a parallel career as a writer of fiction, film and television screenplays and plays for theatre and radio. His radio play The Old Ladies at the Zoo, which starred Peggy Mount and Liz Smith, won the Radio Times Drama Award in 1985.

Members

Reviews

Prolonged with little forward motion to the light thread connecting the crimes and I just couldn't stay interested enough to finish. Glad I didn't wait to spend an audible credit on it.
 
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Bookmarque | Nov 25, 2023 |
Robert Louis Stevenson, author of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde has returned to Edinburgh to bury his father. An old woman is brutally murdered and the White Devils and Scarlet Runners, rival gangs of medical students are causing mayhem. Inspector James McLevy, the Thieftaker, and his faithful constable Martin Mulholland once again, investigate. Using his intimate knowledge of Edinburgh and his psychological insights into the minds of the main characters, McLevy works his way to the killer as always.

David Ashton's books are a delight. The characters are well depicted and easy to imagine so they come alive. The plots are intriguing, and even if you identify the culprit early on the story never disappoints. This book was no exception.… (more)
 
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Matacabras | Jan 9, 2021 |
Not content with playing with the detective James McLevy, Ashton turns his attention to Jean Brash, Mistress of the Just Land, a high class brothel. After the New Year's Day celebrations a body is found in the Just Land, one of their clients. Well aware that this could lead back to them they decide to investigate, while McLevy is investigating first one and then more similar deaths.

It's complex and interesting and the reasoning is pretty good.
½
 
Flagged
wyvernfriend | 2 other reviews | Feb 13, 2018 |
Enough dialect that it could probably do with a glossary of terms, I guessed from context that Thrapple meant throat but it could have been made clearer.
It's the story that starts with a prostitute dying and continues through the mean streets of Leith parish in Edinburgh where Inspector McLevy plies his beat as the first detective

A minor spoiler: I was a little put off by the Serpent and his abilities but then I remembered Richard Mansfield rel="nofollow" _target="_top">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Mansfield

based on history it sometimes plays fast and loose with facts but was an interesting read.… (more)
½
 
Flagged
wyvernfriend | 5 other reviews | Jan 8, 2018 |

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Statistics

Works
27
Members
363
Popularity
#66,173
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
15
ISBNs
87

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