My Brother’s Killer by DM Devine

 

My Brother’s Killer by DM Devine

 

published 1961

 

 


She was wearing a beautifully-cut tweed skirt and a rose-coloured cashmere twin-set

 




We deal with a lot of social snobbery on this blog: but academic snobbery has its place too, and I have discovered a clear winner in that category. I am quoting here from the (invaluable) Agatha Christie Fandom Wiki.

In 1961, Devine submitted his first book, My Brother's Killer for the Dons’ Detective Novel Competition held by Collins Crime Club. Agatha Christie nominated it as winner of the contest. Unfortunately, Devine was disqualified on a technicality as it was ruled that he was not a don but a university administrator. 

I wonder if the book would be so forgotten if he had been allowed to win, because it is an absolute cracker: Christie had a good eye, though there are also elements that might particularly appeal to her.

It’s very much in the Golden Age (GA) tradition – the opening line is ‘I was deep in an armchair relaxing over the Guardian crossword’; people look ‘seedy’; everyone is busy drinking huge quantities and having another aspirin; at the end all the suspects gather to hear the truth. All very redolent of 1930s books. But the setting is fascinating – a small town where everyone knows each other, a respectable solicitor’s practice, tennis club and dinner dances. But there is an underlying current, and you can feel that soon things are going to change with the 1960s – very much like Mary Kelly’s The Spoilt Kill, same year, which I also very much enjoyed. Both could stand as straight novels for their picture of life. 




Simon, the narrator, is the younger brother and junior partner to Oliver in the family law practice. Summoned from his deep armchair by an urgent phonecall, he goes out into a very foggy night (this fog is going to affect everyone’s timings and alibis) and finally gets to the office, and finds his brother dead. Unimpressed by the police investigation, he goes in for some freelance sleuthing, and uncovers all kinds of goings-on among the respectable citizens – infidelity, a love nest, a sex orgy in a nightclub, blackmail – though weirdly, none of this is seen as either surprising or the road to damnation. There’s a rueful air of ‘well of course people do those things, shame about the blackmail and hurt feelings’: and there is much more to the case, and people’s lives, than sex.

The alibis are very complicated, as is the phone system – which I often find boring but not this time. People drift in and out of the frame, everyone has something to hide and a lie to tell. I found it very compelling, and kept changing my mind about who was guilty.

There is one trick (which could well appeal to Agatha Christie) which I am able to use my new #SpoilerNotSpoiler programme to conceal from you. (My theory is that I have written about so many books on the blog that I can tip you off if you want to know, not if you don’t, by use of links).  So if you’re not bothered, there is a repetition of something that happens in this book and this one. If you’ve read them both you could triangulate…

There is a collection of very well-defined characters, and as they get ruled out you wonder are there are any surprises left – but there are.

I always say that Patricia Wentworth is the Queen of the ‘How many people were in the graveyard that night without tripping over each other?’ trope, but other authors can do it too: the solicitor’s office on this dark murder evening was a lot more bustling than it seems to have been on a normal afternoon, everyone managing not to see each other. But that keeps the tension up.



I’m slightly confused also by the dates, which don’t always work out, and would there really have been a fog that heavy – total blackout – at the end of April as (very late on) Simon suddenly reveals it to be?

But overall a most enjoyable read, and highly recommended.

GA expert and crime writer Martin Edwards is also a solicitor, so gave a very nice and informative review of this book back in 2012.

First lady in twinset from Clover Vintage. The second one would not be cashmere but is very elegant – and you can find the pattern and make your own at the Knitting Bee site.

The picture of an office shows receptionist and telephone operator in a law firm – it is Canadian, and some years earlier than the book, but definitely has the right look.

Comments

  1. I do like your spoiler system. So much better than ROT-13.

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    1. Thank you! I'm quite pleased with it myself...

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  2. Oh, my, Moira! Academic setting, a solid murder mystery, yes, this really does appeal to me (but I'm sure you figured it would). I really need to look this one up, especially since Christie liked it. And you have a great spoiler system. Kudos

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    1. It is right up your street Margot, I think, and I think you would enjoy. And of course we trust Agatha!

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  3. Moira, sometimes you lead me into untrodden ways: interesting offers at the Toronto Public Library when I search for an obscurish author. Report on the white paper on a proposed code of ethical conduct for Saskatchewan public office holders. Yeah, one contributor was D. G. Devine.

    Yes, My Brother's Killer too, but as usual, reference only. They have huge vintage Mystery and SciFi collections, but carefully controlled, or they soon wouldn't have any collections.

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    1. You got going quickly Susan, so you deserved better.
      You could try the Internet Archive Library - I don't know if it has different access rules in different countries, but they do have the book on their list
      https://archive.org/details/mybrotherskiller0000devi/mode/2up
      Blogfrind Shay taught me always to look there...

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    2. Openlibrary.org has this book. The author is listed as Dominic Devine, but his initials will also bring him up in the Search.

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    3. Excellent. Thanks Marty.
      Susan D

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  4. From what I've read in various mysteries, academic snobs are among the worst!

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    1. I think you are right! I always think of a line from a John Betjeman poem which completely skewers those awful men:
      Objectively, our Common Room is like a small Athenian State -
      Except for Lewis: he's all right
      But do you think he's *quite* first rate ?

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  5. This goes to the top of my TBR pile so that I can comment on it! You have whetted my appetite. Chrissie

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    1. Yes please! Obviously, I think you will enjoy... and fair return for The Spoilt Kill

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    2. Yes, very much the same era and atmosphere as The Spoilt Kill. I was wrong-footed in my choice of culprit, and felt at the end that I ought really to have guessed ... So a very enjoyable read. It did make me feel glad that I wasn't a young woman in the 1950s - marriage or being a secretary - didn't seem to many other options.

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    3. Though having said that, when I graduated with an English degree in the 1970s, I saw one of the university careers officers, who suggested that my next step might be to do a secretarial course! I bet he did not suggest that to any of the male students. I did not follow his advice.

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    4. Oh good, glad you enjoyed. Yes, it did make you think (with great relief) that we've come a long way. My first job out of university was at the BBC, and at parties in London with everyone's 20-something friends in their shared houses, we would all say 'what do you do?' and I would say 'I work at the BBC' and I lost count of the number of men who said 'Oh? Are you a secretary?' Not that there's anything remotely wrong with being a secretary, it was just the assumption...
      Mind you, one of my very good friends astonished us all by saying she was going to do a 'graduate secretary' course (probably doesn't exist now) when we were finishing university - and she did, and went on to be a fabulously successful businesswoman!

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    5. A former colleague (female)who was a combat engineer in the late 70s/early 80s used to answer that question with deadpan "I blow sh*t up."

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  6. I don't know whether it counts as a sub-genre, but I do enjoy the 50s and 60s stories which concentrate on small town corruption, hypocrisy and double dealing. George Bellairs (whose main career as a bank manager worringly suggests that he may have been writing from experience) and Colin Watson's Flaxborough Chronicles as well as some earlier Reginald Hill stories are amongst my not so guilty pleasures in this area.
    I don't know if it reflects on my character or changing times, but I do recall when i first read it that the lady in teh photographs might have been a lot more fun a s a wife than any of the other women in Simon's life.
    I'm not certain id this is another trope from the times, but the sense that the secreatary was actually more organised than the people she worked for reminds me of my early working days in the mid 1980s when a lot of older women working as secretaries clearly were as talented as their (then) predominatly male bosses.

    I do like the new spoiler hint system.

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    1. Yes I agree, those small-town matters can be riveting. Michael Gilbert also had an interest, and this reminded me of my dislike of his Black Seraphim, which feels like it should be about church matters, but is much more about local government. I have a post here https://clothesinbooks.blogspot.com/2018/08/two-books-by-michael-gilbert.html which explains how he got on the wrong side of my champagne socialism...
      I loved the lady in the photograph, she was tremendous fun, and I totally agree with you.
      And, I also agree about those under-used women: as you say, when you start thinking about that (entirely correct) trope 'oh I couldn't manage without her, she runs my life' it leads you to think about wasted talent and lack of recognition.
      Miss Blacklock in Christie's Murder is Announced talks very convincingly about being secretary to a great man in finance, it's a memorable passage. (and surprising for two reasons, one being that you wouldn't think Agatha would have known so much about it, it is a feat of imagination)

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    2. Have you ever dedicated a post to secretaries in mystery books? I nominate Sophie the Bishop's secretary in Phil Rickman's books. Another "secretarial" trope is that this paragon of efficiency is secretly in love with her boss (which Sophie is not, thank goodness).

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    3. That is such a good idea. I love the Phil Rickman books, though I think I have only blogged on one, and yes you are right: Sophie such a great character.

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    4. What a great idea! There is the splendid Miss Corsa in the Emma Lathen novels.

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    5. I LOVE Miss Corsa. This is such a good idea.

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    6. Seconding the proposal for more of Miss Corsa here. And now I'm trying to come up with secretaries who, unlike Miss Corsa, use their efficiency for evil ...
      Sovay

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    7. Another vote for Miss Corsa.

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    8. Some more Bad Secretaries (ie villainous rather than poor typing skills) would be excellent...

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    9. I can think of one by Agatha Christie and one by Margery Allingham - no more are coming to mind at present.
      Sovay

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    10. Though if poor typing skills did count, the endless succession of Temporary Typists in Sarah Caudwell's books would deserve a mention.
      Sovay

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    11. Tell me if you think of any more. I think any interesting secretary should go on my list, they don't have to be evil!

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    12. The one decent Temporary Typist 62 New Square ever gets (Lilian in The Sirens Sang of Murder) is lost to them when she comes into her inheritance viz. a complete set of the works of the late Captain W.E. Johns (a reference which makes me smile every time).

      If/when you do post about Secretaries in Books, I'd like to nominate Phoebe Gunther [The Silent Speaker - Rex Stout], confidential secretary to the late Cheney Boone of the Bureau of Price Regulation, for her remarkable tenacity, audacity and imagination in support of her boss's aims. Even Nero Wolfe is impressed.

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    13. That was Sovay by the way. Male secretaries are also interesting, and featured largely in a conversation I had with a niece a few years ago about why the Bennett girls in Pride and Prejudice can't solve all their problems by going out and getting jobs.
      Sovay

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    14. Excellent work, and now am going to have to reread Sirens, and see if I know the Stout..
      Yes, and there are a lot of male secretaries in early crime fiction. It was definitely a thing - all those promising young men.
      I have always enjoyed the fact that someone who does the typing was originally called 'a typewriter', ie the typewriter was a person. 'The typewriter walked into the room...'

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  7. Bookfinder.com has some reasonably priced copies of this: https://bit.ly/3yZgLFD

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    1. PS In fact I've just purchased one for about £4 and look forward to receiving and reading it, though my 'basket of books under the bed' will be groaning.

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    2. Thanks, Katrina, very helfpul, and i hope you enjoy! (when you get to it)

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  8. It's interesting that it was the Guardian crossword Simon was relaxing over. The usual trope to establish someone as intellectual was their relaxing over the Times crossword. Is Simon a characteristically Guardian reader or is it a simple variant on the trope? It might be worth looking at the newspaper-reading tastes of characters in novels and what it reveals about their characters!

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    1. My exact thought when I read it, and then when I was using it as an example of GA style! No, nothing much to say he is meant to be the modern idea of a Guardian reader.
      Love the idea of newspapers-as-indicators, although many authors made up the names of newspapers in their novels, no help there.

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    2. One of the other mainstays in the 1930s of using crossword puzzles in books to indicate intellect and, to a lesser extent, politics was to refer to tackling Torquemada puzzles in the Observer. As he took his name from the most famous member of the Spanish Inquisition and no one seemed to quibble, that is probably a good sign that he was seen as challenging. My recollection is that the books didn't even bother mentioning the newspaper on the assumption that the audience would know it already.
      I'm moderately certain that I came across a reference in a Georgette Heyer detective novel I re-read within the last six months. Certainly, it tempted me to do an internet search to flesh out the details as it was a reference which rang bells from other novels of the time.

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    3. Forgot to mention that Torquemada (real name Edward Powys Mathers) also wrote a murder mystery puzzle called Cain's Jawbone (which sounds like a good name for a book by Mortmain in I Capture the Castle).
      According to Wikipedia, it is 100 pages long, but the catch is that its pages are arranged in the wrong order. (Actually, very Mortmain-like) The reader has to reassemble the pages to work out who was murdered and who was the murderer.

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    4. So which Georgette Heyer book?
      I have a copy of the Cain's Jawbone on my shelf, unopened. One of these days. I contributed to a kickstarter to get it republished, but have never summoned up the energy to give it a go.
      Yes very Mortmain. Also, BS Johnson you could see having a loose-leaf book - did he do that in fact?

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    5. BS Johnson had a book in several sections in a box (The Unfortunates). Unlike Cain's Jawbone there is no "right" way to put it together.
      In Terry Pratchett's Discworld there is BS (Bloody Stupid) Johnson, inventor and landscape gardener. Whether there is any connexion between the two...
      Powys Mathers translated the 1001 Nights from a French translation and also translated (wrote) Indian religious poems.

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    6. I would have guessed that you'd know!
      I remember coming across BSJ in Terry Pratchett: surely deliberate...
      Is there any connection with the Powys-as-last-name family? I find those I have tried (TF and JC) so infuriatingly unreadable that I am prejudiced against the crossword man just because of the name.
      But I really must get Cain's Jawbone out of the packaging...

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    7. Quick look at Wikipedia entries suggests no connection or if there was, it was an extremely remote one. Normally Wikipedia is obsessive about famous or semi-famous relatives. Powys was from Torquemada's mother's family, and his Father was a baron in Lancashire. TF and JC's father was a clergyman in Somerset.
      I'm sorry, but I haven't been able to recall which book I caught the Torquemada reference in. I've done a lot of re-reading recently, and 1930s books have formed a large part of it. Heyer just seemed the most likely, but there are other suspects.

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    8. I wondered about Pratchett, but I didn't think he'd put the boot in on a suicide, though Bloody Stupid (and Bloody Arrogant) apply.
      J.C. Powys I admire in moderation, but an idolatrous friend who was moving and down-sizing gave me several dozen books when she was downsizing, and I felt guilty about dumping them when I was downsizing.

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    9. I found it! It IS Death in the Stocks, did you suggest that? 'the Observer (folded open at the Torquemada crossword)' is on the table, and someone is trying unsucessfully to do it, they have reference books there too...
      Crosswords and newspapers in books is another great theme, and I am starting to collect too many of them (ie too many themes for me to keep track of the lists)

      Apparently Torquemada reviewed A Blunt Instrument in the Observer very favourably, and Heyer was delighted.

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    10. Roger: I'm holding firm that Pratchett meant Johnson...
      There are few books I have disliked as much as Mr Weston's Good Wine. I threw it across the room: there have only been a few times I have been so sorely tried (a Jon McGregor book and a Cormac McCarthy)

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    11. I reread Death in the Stocks recently, so that is almost certainly it. I'm glad my memory isn't totally unreliable - yet.
      I look forward to the new series of posts.
      This probably belongs in a post a month ago, but Jo Walton has this brilliant concept of the Suck Fairy, which means that when you re-read books, someone has taken all the good bits out of them.
      I can understand why I enjoyed Hermann Hesse at the age of 18 and find him hardgoing now.
      However, most books from the 1970s I reread risk inducing a Violet Elizabeth Bott reaction. It takes a great deal of imagination to recall why I enjoyed them then and why they were popular.
      I don't have that problem with 1930s books, and maybe it is easier to see the underlying humanity through the socially acceptable attitudes of the time.
      Perhaps that is why Kipling can still be read with enjoyment while Sapper is unreadable,


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    12. What a fascinating line to pursue.
      I love Jo Walton, beause as well as being a great writer, I feel she is a reader after my own heart - I hadn't come across the Suck Fairy, but of course, exactly...
      There's always that moment when you heartily recommend a book to someone else, insisting they should read it, and then afterwards think 'I haven't read it in 30 years, maybe it's terrible in fact, and I am sending this poor person in the wrong direction?'
      I don't know if this is a well-known theory: I read somewhere once that some writers think characters can and should aspire to perfection, and that it's achievable, and that is the point of fiction. Others say we cannot achieve it, but we should do the best we can and be tolerant of the failings along the way. It stuck in my mind (and I've probably got it wrong in some way) and I often think - the second kind of writers are the ones that always appeal to me, and survive re-reading down the years. Kipling Shakespeare and Trollope all in that category...

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    13. If "writers think characters can and should aspire to perfection, and that it's achievable, and that is the point of fiction" they chose the wrong... er... vocation. They should be clergymen or prophets.

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  9. I've never heard of this author but like the sound of the book - another one to add to the ever-growing search list ...
    Sovay

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    1. I know how unfair it is to keep finding really good books to tempt other people!

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    2. I've made a rule this year that I won't buy more than three books per month online as I am swamped - I've had to make two TBR piles so they can prop each other up. Anything I spot in actual bricks-and-mortar shops is fair game though.
      Sovay

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    3. I wish I had your restraint.

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    4. Alao, if you see something that's hard-to-find you have to buy it, right?
      I read a lot on Kindle now, and buying for that never counts because they don't take up any space...

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    5. Absolutely - if it's in a second-hand bookshop there's no option but to snap it up straight away because it won't be there next time you call ...

      Unfortunately Kindle and sites like Project Gutenburg don't work for me as too much reading onscreen causes problems with my eyes, and since I have to do a fair amount of it at work I avoid it at home.

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    6. Understandable but unlucky about the screens.
      I love my Kindle mostly because it means I never never run out of things to read. Going on holiday used to be a huge issue, because of the pile of books required - no longer.
      Also - I always read while getting my haircut, and when she needs to do the front and my glasses are in the way, I can just increase the size of the text!
      (I was outraged by someone claiming recently that it was wrong and rude to read and not chat during a haircut - what a thing to make up a rule about. How judgemental...)

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  10. Great post and good to know the book can be accessed online. There are many jokes about librarians in cardigans - I am only a librarian one or two days a month but it is true that both the library and my actual government office are always too hot or too cold so I am a big fan of twinsets even if they are dated and/or predictable. Unfortunately, lately they seem hard to find, as have been replaced by camisoles and cardigans which I will certainly not be wearing to work. Nor can I knit well enough to make anything but a lopsided scarf, alas.

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    1. Yes that librarian stereotype must be very annoying. You still see it in modern cartoons (glasses, bun, cardigan, finger on the lips, shhhh) and I find it surprising.
      Twinsets a very useful idea as well as looking nice.
      I think I need to do a post covering literary secretaries, librarians, and twinsets.
      Nancy Mitford girls knitting their twinsets 'to go with, but not to match' their tweeds...

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    2. I say wear your librarian cardigan/twinset with pride, CLM! I am not a librarian but one of the reasons I chose my current glasses was that the teenage assistant in the opticians said they made me look like one.
      No shushing from librarians these days though - they're more likely to be leading a group of toddlers in a jolly singsong.
      Sovay

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    3. Exactly! Librarians are lovely. And their look is very stylish.

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  11. The clothes make me think of those in The Hour, which I'm watching at the moment. The female character in charge of the news programme wears pencil skirts or straight dresses (and always a brooch!), while her assistant, from a lower social class, wears flared skirts in a patterned fabric. Very interesting.
    Small towns - Stanley Middleton comes to mind.

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    1. Oh I loved that programme, and the clothes too.
      I went to work at the BBC in the 1970s, and I could write extensively about clothes choices there amongst the women employees...
      There are too many topics, I want to pursue them all!

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  12. Please do, Moira!

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