The Devil's Grin (Kronberg Crimes Series Book 1), by Annelie Wendeberg
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The Devil's Grin (Kronberg Crimes Series Book 1), by Annelie Wendeberg
Read Ebook The Devil's Grin (Kronberg Crimes Series Book 1), by Annelie Wendeberg
"...one of the best Sherlock Holmes novels of all time." Sherlock Holmes Magazine "...a formidable dark-romantic conspiracy novel. A duel of two deduction monsters." Die Welt In Victorian London's cesspool of crime and disease, a series of murders remains undiscovered until a cholera victim is found floating in the city's drinking water supply. Dr Anton Kronberg, England's best bacteriologist, is called upon to investigate and finds evidence of abduction and medical maltreatment. While Scotland Yard has little interest in pursuing the case, Kronberg pushes on and crosses paths with Sherlock Holmes. The detective immediately discovers Kronberg's secret - a woman masquerading as a man in order to practice medicine - a criminal deed that could land her in prison for years to come. But both must join forces to stop a crime so monstrous, it outshines Jack the Ripper's deeds in brutality and cold-bloodedness.
The Devil's Grin (Kronberg Crimes Series Book 1), by Annelie Wendeberg- Amazon Sales Rank: #68930 in eBooks
- Published on: 2015-03-16
- Released on: 2015-03-16
- Format: Kindle eBook
Review Awarded the "Blue Carbuncle" (by the German Sherlock Holmes Society) for best Sherlock Holmes novel 2014"...one of the best Sherlock Holmes novels of all times." Sherlock Holmes Magazin (on the German edition)"...a powerful debut." Stuttgarter Zeitung (on the German edition)"...the new dream team of detective literature." KrimiLese (on the German edition)"...provocative and original..." Peter Kavanagh, CBC Radio Producer"A brilliant page turner..." BookBub"...truly fascinating..." Paul Negri, former editor-in-chief and president of Dover Publications"...this interpretation is smashing. Anna Kronberg is a kick-butt heroine...Suspenseful, authentic yet innovative and faithful to the original Sherlock Holmes character--can't wish for a better combination. This is a skillful writer and a thinking one, no easy outs and no lazy solutions." Marik Berghs Book Reviews"...fast-paced, engaging, enjoyably atmospheric, dark, and I'm really fascinated with Anna's character." The Stormy Petrels"...a poignant novel at times almost poetic" ... "An unforgettable hero(ine)" Dan Andriacco, best-selling author of Baker Street Beat"A terrific read!" Richard "RB" Botto, CEO of Stage32
From the Author Get freebies and more at anneliewendeberg.com
About the Author Annelie Wendeberg is an ex-scientist and the author of the award-winning Kronberg Thriller series and the 1/2986 climate fiction saga. THE DEVIL'S GRIN has been as high as #15 on Amazon - and 4 countries have picked up the work for translation. When she's not writing, Annelie digs up her small farm or makes cheese.anneliewendeberg.com
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Most helpful customer reviews
84 of 89 people found the following review helpful. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle must be...well...grinning By Leapin' Literary Lurkers As a devotee of the multiple PBS incarnations of Sherlock Holmes, I was pleased to find I could easily picture him in the pages of Ms. Wendeberg's rendering.I thought she did a masterful job of describing the woeful state of early sanitation, gruesome autopsies, general medicine and the significant gender issues rampant in that time.It was an interesting concept that worked well except for a couple of slippages in vernacular which seemed out of character such as "how the heck will you know?" I would have expected something more along the lines of "Tarnation" or "Thunder."Given the fact that proofreading was a big part of my professional life, I tend to go on automatic pilot and was minorly disappointed to see a few too many careless errors along the line of trails for trials, lead for led, fried for friend, nervous tick for tic, diseased for deceased, loosing for losing, and where for were. Those should have been caught in the editing process, especially important if the author is not a native English speaker...not sure if this is the case with Ms. Wendeberg or not.In this case, however (unlike many other e-books), I liked the story presentation well enough to try another of the author's tales and hold out hope that similar errors will be caught and corrected.
98 of 112 people found the following review helpful. Interesting story, but marred by errors and not very satisfying overall By Thomas S. Tullis I just finished reading this on my Kindle. It was enjoyable but the book is marred by poor editing. Every few pages contained errors (e.g., using "where" instead of "wear"). And even though it's an interesting story (a female doctor disguised as a male doctor, who starts working with Sherlock Holmes to solve a crime), I found the end unsatisfying. It was as if the story just ended midstream without really resolving anything.
85 of 98 people found the following review helpful. Incomplete teaser. Readable page-turner. Unconvincing romance. Shallow historical atmosphere. By Daniel P. Smith Disclosure: I bought it at the $0.99 bargain price.Even at this price, I object. This is not a complete story. It's a teaser or a sample. It ends in mid-story with nothing resolved. I don't know Annelie Wendeberg's intentions for the series, so I don't know whether anything will ever be resolved. You must decide for yourself whether she and her publishers are playing fair with regard to how the book is presented. I deducted a star because of it.To me, the clearest reason for thinking she is not playing fair is the last sentence--NOT a spoiler!: "That day, neither of knew that we had punched a considerable hole into Professor Moriarty's criminal spider web.""Professor Moriarty?" Huh? Professor WHO? _This is the first time he is mentioned in the book._ There's no setup, no explanation. Some readers might not even know the name. Even some readers _who have read Sherlock Holmes_ might not know it; he is mentioned in only a handful of the stories. To introduce him in the last sentence and consider it to be a good way to end a novel--is unsatisfactory. Imagine "The Hobbit" ending "Little did Bilbo know he had just thwarted Sauron!"It underlines another thing that needs to be said about the book, although I think it is fairly obvious: I don't think it will please anyone who isn't familiar with the Sherlock Holmes stories, as too much of the pleasure involves recognizing the fairly skillful way she is ringing variations on the familiar theme.The book reads well, I read it from start to finish. I thought the dialog, incidents, and storytelling aspects were skillful and enjoyable.The biggest praise I can give it is that, yes, I did feel that the Sherlock Holmes of this book is the "real" Sherlock Holmes; that is, she has done a good job of entering the Holmes fictional universe.I am afraid I found the main premises too exaggerated to enjoy. Wendeberg's knowledge of gaslit London seems to be a superficial pastiche of things one might pick up from reading "steampunk" fiction. The book suffers from an anachronistic sensibility with respect to sexuality, feminism, etc. I am not convinced that heroine Kronberg is thinking about her situation the way a Victorian would. One might say that am convinced that it is the real 221B Baker Street, but not that it is really the 1890s. The premise of the book is that the heroine and Holmes are intellectual equals and soul-mates, and experience mutual erotic attraction. I did not find the sexual tension convincing.I enjoyed the book. I wouldn't have read it all the way through if I hadn't. But I don't plan to buy further volumes in the series.P.S. I did not notice the typos and proofreading errors others have commented on, so either they've been corrected or I'm inattentive. On my Kindle Fire set for a tan background, there are some weird switches back and forth from perfectly black text to the normal dark brown text suggesting there are still some technical problems in the Kindle format processing.
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