Dalziel & Pascoe Series by Reginald Hill, Colin Buchanan, Brian Glover

4.00 · 200 ratings
  • A Clubbable Woman (Dalziel & Pascoe #1)
    #1

    A Clubbable Woman (Dalziel & Pascoe #1)

    Reginald Hill, Brian Glover

    Rated: 3.83 of 5 stars
    · 18 ratings · published 1970

    This is the first novel in the Dalziel and Pascoe series, which was made into a major BBC TV serial. The wife of a rugby player is found dead in front of the TV.

  • An Advancement Of Learning (Dalziel & Pascoe #2)
    #2

    An Advancement Of Learning (Dalziel & Pascoe #2)

    Reginald Hill

    Rated: 3.86 of 5 stars
    · 14 ratings · published 1971

    Hill's fans will be delighted with this earlier adventure of the enormously popular detective team of Dalziel and Pascoe. The mismatched couple sets off to investigate a college campus teeming with strange nocturnal rites, leftist students, a voyeur, a murder, and a skeleton under a statue. "Deadly wit, Machiavellian plotting, sheer fun".--Booklist.

  • A Pinch of Snuff (Dalziel & Pascoe #5)
    #5

    A Pinch of Snuff (Dalziel & Pascoe #5)

    Reginald Hill

    Rated: 3.79 of 5 stars
    · 14 ratings · published 1978

    “Reginald Hill blends civility and madness in a most agreeable way.”— New York  Love, or at least pornography, was for sale at the arty Calliope Kinema Club on posh, proper Wilkinson Square. According to Yorkshire police superintendent Dalziel, it was all legal. Detective Peter Pascoe, however, sat uneasily in the dark. His dentist, who knew real broken teeth and blood when he saw them, insisted that the pretty actress wasn’t playing a part... more

  • A Killing Kindness (Dalziel & Pascoe #6)
    #6

    A Killing Kindness (Dalziel & Pascoe #6)

    Reginald Hill

    Rated: 4.06 of 5 stars
    · 16 ratings · published 1980

    The Yorkshire detectives are upstaged by a Shakespeare-inspired serial killer in this “stylish, superior . . . snappy” mystery (Kirkus Reviews).   Reginald Hill “raised the classical British mystery to new heights” when he introduced pugnacious Yorkshire Det. Inspector Andrew Dalziel and his partner, the callow Sgt. Peter Pascoe (The New York Times Book Review)... more

  • Child's Play (Dalziel & Pascoe #9)
    #9

    Child's Play (Dalziel & Pascoe #9)

    Reginald Hill, Colin Buchanan

    Rated: 4.00 of 5 stars
    · 12 ratings · published 1986

    Gwendoline Lomas's son had gone missing during WW 2, But she'd never accepted his death. Her funeral is interrupted by a man falling to his knees crying mama!. Could it be her son? Dalziel And Pascoe investigate when a body is found in a car.

  • Bones and Silence (Dalziel & Pascoe #11)
    #11

    Bones and Silence (Dalziel & Pascoe #11)

    Reginald Hill

    Rated: 4.00 of 5 stars
    · 16 ratings · published 1990

    One woman dead and one threatening to die set Yorkshire's police superintendent Dalziel and Inspector Pascoe on a chilling hunt for a killer and a potential suicide. A drunken Dalziel witnesses the murder that others insist is a tragic accident. Meanwhile the letters of an anonymous woman say she plans to kill herself in a spectacular way...unless Pascoe can find her first... more

  • One Small Step (Dalziel & Pascoe #12)
    #12

    One Small Step (Dalziel & Pascoe #12)

    Reginald Hill

    Rated: 3.83 of 5 stars
    · 6 ratings · published 1990

    In the year 2010 a French astronaut, one of an international space team from the Federated States of Europe, becomes the first man to be murdered on the moon. Retired Detective-Superintendent Andrew Dalziel and Peter Pascoe are required to investigate. The author also wrote "Bones and Silence".

  • Pictures of Perfection (Dalziel & Pascoe #14)
    #14

    Pictures of Perfection (Dalziel & Pascoe #14)

    Reginald Hill

    Rated: 4.07 of 5 stars
    · 14 ratings · published 1994

    Reginald Hill's ironic humor, polished prose, and keen insight have placed him squarely alongside such great mystery writers as P. D. James and Ruth Rendell. In his latest novel his much-appreciated team of detectives, the incomparable Dalziel and Pascoe, find themselves in the pretty village of Enscombe, which is steadfastly trying -- though somewhat in vain -- to repel the advances of both tourists and developers... more

  • The Wood Beyond (Dalziel & Pascoe #15)
    #15

    The Wood Beyond (Dalziel & Pascoe #15)

    Reginald Hill

    Rated: 4.07 of 5 stars
    · 14 ratings · published 1996

    Police inspector Peter Pascoe is looking for a place to bury his grandmum’s ashes, when he stumbles upon a startling family secret—an ancestor unjustly executed in wartime. So preoccupied is Pascoe that he hardly notices the uproar in his own department. Eight female animal rights protesters have unearthed human bones on the grounds of a drug company’s research headquarters... more

  • On Beulah Height (Dalziel & Pascoe #17)
    #17

    On Beulah Height (Dalziel & Pascoe #17)

    Reginald Hill

    Rated: 4.13 of 5 stars
    · 16 ratings · published 1998

    Into thin air...Three little girls, one by one, had vanished from the farming village of Dendale. And Superintendent Andy Dalziel, a young detective in those days, never found their bodies--or the person who snatched them. Then the valley where Dendale stood was flooded to create a reservoir, and the town itself ceased to be . . . except in Dalziel's memory.Twelve years later, the threads of past and present are slowly winding into a chilling mosaic... more

  • Dialogues of the Dead (Dalziel & Pascoe #19)
    #19

    Dialogues of the Dead (Dalziel & Pascoe #19)

    Reginald Hill

    Rated: 4.07 of 5 stars
    · 14 ratings · published 2001

    Yorkshire investigators Dalziel and Pascoe find themselves embroiled in a deadly duel of wits against a killer known only as the Wordman - a brilliant sociopath who leaves literary clues and dead bodies in his wake .

  • Good Morning, Midnight (Dalziel & Pascoe #21)
    #21

    Good Morning, Midnight (Dalziel & Pascoe #21)

    Reginald Hill

    Rated: 4.00 of 5 stars
    · 14 ratings · published 2004

    "A complex and deeply satisfying tale...one part traditional English whodunit and one part shadowy corporate thriller....Throughout, Pascoe and Dalziel are their usual witty, intelligent selves; they continue to be two of the more interesting police detectives in modern crime fiction....Hill has provided readers with a superior example of the mystery form--one with a delicious cold sting in the final page... more

  • Death Comes for the Fat Man (Dalziel & Pascoe #22)
    #22

    Death Comes for the Fat Man (Dalziel & Pascoe #22)

    Reginald Hill

    Rated: 4.13 of 5 stars
    · 16 ratings · published 2007

    There was no sign of life. But not for a second did Pascoe admit the possibility of death. Dalziel was indestructible. Dalziel is, and was, and forever shall be, world without end, amen. Everybody knew that. Therein lay half his power. Chief constables might come and chief constables might go, but Fat Andy went on forever... more

  • Midnight Fugue (Dalziel & Pascoe #24)
    #24

    Midnight Fugue (Dalziel & Pascoe #24)

    Reginald Hill

    Rated: 4.06 of 5 stars
    · 16 ratings · published 2009

    It starts with a phone call to Superintendent Dalziel from an old friend asking for help. But where it ends is a very different story. Gina Wolfe has come to mid Yorkshire in search of her missing husband, believed dead. Her fiance, Commander Mick Purdy of the Met, thinks Dalziel should be able to take care of the job. What none of them realize is how events set in motion decades ago will come to a violent head on this otherwise ordinary summer's day... more

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