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I can't think of anyone except for Sr. Arthur Doyle who wrote the Sherlock Holmes series. You'll also try Women's Murder Club or something like that. Why don't you try nancy drew or hardy boys? or harry potter? try something new, too.
susandianeYou could try Emily Brightwell's "Mrs. Jeffries" or Nancy Atherton's "Aunt Dimity" The Aunt Dimity's take place mostly in a small English village. They are quite good, only not murder mysteries per se.
I love Emily Brightwell and the Mrs. Jeffries series...it's such a a good read. I love Sherlock Holmes as well and there's the Tea Shop mysteries by Laura Childs which are great. Jill Churchill's Grace and Favour is excellent, going back to the Depression. Also love Minette Walters although she doesn't have a series like Christie's Poirot and Marple but if you like a good mystery and thriller, she's it. P. D. James and Adam Dalgelish always a good read. I also heard of Australia's Phyrne Fisher series written by Kerry Greenwood and if you can your hands on it, it's a good read.
I love Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, famous for Sherlock Holmes. Chracters are little bit similar, but plot style is quite different but interesting. In Sherlock Holmes Mystery, Dt Watson is like Hastings. :-D
I read Nancy Drew when I was younger, and those introduced me to the mystery genre. I collect the old Nancy Drew books.
Try Carolyn Keene's Nancy Drew series. I think you shall also try P.D. James' novels. Or try Sherlock Holmes novels/short stories.
I agree, Watson is very similar to Hastings. Tzew, read anything but the Mary Higgins Clark novels. Absolutely dreadful. Ugh.
Ngaio Marsh's Inspector Alleyn books are very good and quite similar to Agatha Christie, they are quite hard to buy though as some shops don't have much in stock.
I've just started reading an Elizabeth George mystery. I think you would like her because it is set in London, but it's in present-day. Also, perhaps try Dorothy L. Sayers. She wrote her classics when Agatha Christie started.
How about Ruth Rendell/Barbra Vine. She has written some wonderful stories.
GKCfanDorothy L. Sayers was a contemporary and colleague of Christie's, and although some aspects of Sayers's style are very different, many of their fan bases overlap.
Sorry for beating a dead horse (or should I say "topic"?) here, but I decided this was the best place for me to post this. I'd like to thank GKCfan for recommending G.K. Chesterton to me way back on the old site. I've gotten very fond of Chesterton, his love of the paradox, and Father Brown. (Chesterton also inspired the works of one of my very favourite authors, John Dickson Carr.) My sincerest thanks for introducing me to these fine works.
You're very welcome, go_leafs_nation!
Seeing you have not mentioned AC's non-series, I guess you cling to have a series on a detective basis. Then, I recomend you Ellery Queen to read next. He/they has two detectives in his/their series, Ellery Queen and Drury Lane, just as AC has Poirot and Miss Marple. Both are really good at solving cases and their deductions are wonderful though they are a little bit difficult to understand.
You might enjoy Daphne DuMaurier, who writes suspense stories, not exactly mysteries. My favorite is Rebecca. but she has several others, as well.
I agree with regards to Dorothy L Sayers Lord Peter Wimsey series. They are much more 'forensically' leaning though. He's a great character.
Some more modern writers I enjoy are :
Kerry Greenwood : her 1920's Melbourne based Phryne Fisher series is a huge sucess here in Australia. In case it's the Art Deco period you like.
Ellis Peters : Brother Cadfael series set in the 1100's in Shrewsbury.
Charles Finch : Charles Lenox mysteries set in Victorian London. Only three written so far and I'm pretty sure the first was a finalist in the 'Agatha Award' which is high praise indeed!
Also 'The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie' by Alan Bradley won the 2007 Daggar award for debut novel in the UK and it's fantastic. The sleuth is an 11 year old girl, but don't let that put you off. I have lent this book to my crime-loving and non-crime reading friends alike and they all love it. It's set in the UK in the 1950's and is very clever indeed.
That's enought from me! :-)
robreidNgaio Marsh's Inspector Alleyn books are very good and quite similar to Agatha Christie, they are quite hard to buy though as some shops don't have much in stock.
When were these published? I can't :-)find any info one them.
Ten people, each with something to hide and something to fear, are invited to a lonely mansion on Soldier Island by a host who, surprisingly, fails to appear.
When the wealthy patriarch, Aristide, is murdered, suspicion falls on the whole household. ...
Travelling on the Orient Express, Poirot is approached by a desperate American. Afraid that someone plans to kill him, Ratchett asks Poirot for help ...
Masthead Photography: Joan Hickson image © BBC
MURDER MOST FOUL © Turner Entertainment Co. A Warner Bros. Entertainment Company. All Rights Reserved.
AGATHA CHRISTIE® POIROT® MARPLE® Copyright ©2009 Agatha Christie Limited. All rights reserved.
I have just finished my final Poriot book and have also read all of Marples.
Could anyone recommend an author close to the standard of these characters.
Thanks