No Graves As Yet: A Novel of World War I #01

Unabridged
Author: Anne Perry
Narrator: Anne Perry
Genres: Fiction, Mystery, Thriller, Suspense
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Date: August 2003
Length: 12 hours
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

Through Anne Perry’s magnificent Victorian novels, millions of readers have enjoyed the pleasures and intrigue of a bygone age. Now, with the debut of an extraordinary new series, this New York Times bestselling author sweeps us into the golden summer of 1914, a time of brief enchantment when English men and women basked in the security of wealth and power, even as the last weeks of their privileged world were swiftly passing. Theirs was a peace that led to war.



On a sunny afternoon in late June, Cambridge professor Joseph Reavley is summoned from a student cricket match to learn that his parents have died in an automobile crash. Joseph’s brother, Matthew, as officer in the Intelligence Service, reveals that their father had been en route to London to turn over to him a mysterious secret document—allegedly with the power to disgrace England forever and destroy the civilized world. A paper so damning that Joseph and Matthew dared mention it only to their restless younger sister. Now it has vanished.

What has happened to this explosive document, if indeed it ever existed? How had it fallen into the hands of their father, a quiet countryman? Not even Matthew, with his Intelligence connections, can answer these questions. And Joseph is soon burdened with a second tragedy: the shocking murder of his most gifted student, beautiful Sebastian Allard, loved and admired by everyone. Or so it appeared.

Meanwhile, England’s seamless peace is cracking—as the distance between the murder of an Austrian archduke by a Serbian anarchist and the death of a brilliant university student by a bullet to the head of grows shorter by the day.

Anne Perry is a sublime master of suspense. In No Graves As Yet, her latest haunting masterpiece, she reminds us that love and hate, cowardice and courage, good and evil are always a part of life, in our own time as well as on the eve of the greatest war the world has ever known.

Reviews (6)

No Graves as Yet, A Novel of WW 1

Written by Anonymous on May 5th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 5/5

I was only 5 minutes into this book when I realized how grateful I was to know that there were 4 more books left to go after this one. What a master of characters and history Anne Perry is. Facts that I learned in World History are suddenly part of the story of someone's life. A wonderful, wonderful book for anyone, but for someone who enjoys history it's an absolute marvel.

No Graves as yet

Written by Anonymous on April 4th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 2/5

If you haven't "read" any of her books before, the author has the feel for the times and does an excellent job bringing the character to life. That said, I find her a very depressing author, she is constantantly referring to death and how the characters feel about their loss. By the time you start the second novel, you can practically recite the characters feelings with the reader. If I hadn't been on a long road trip, I would have shipped the second book back unread.

Too Slow...

Written by Robin from San Juan Capistrano, CA on July 19th, 2006

  • Book Rating: 1/5

Anne Perry does a great job of setting the scene. She really is very good at helping you to feel you are in England just before World War I. But her characters spend so much time hand wringing that not very much happens. Lots of emotion and not much story! And the few glimpses of the shadowy mastermind involved in the conspiracy are just annoying as they don't tie into anything else in the book. I found listening to this book agonizingly slow, although I stuck it out to the end. This would have been a much better book had it been edited down to half its length. I canceled the remaining books in this series from my rental list.

No Graves as Yet

Written by Anonymous on November 18th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 3/5

Good story but slow moving. 6-7 disks would have been better. The final 2 disks kept me in the car listening while the 8 prior were at times hard to get through.

very slow....

Written by Anonymous on May 15th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 2/5

This book moves incredibly slowly. Not until the last 2 discs did I actually become interested.

No Graves As Yet

Written by Anonymous on April 18th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 4/5

I enjoyed the development of character's strengths and flaws with regards to their own recognition and growth. This book is an easy listen which has you jumping in with the author guessing murder scenarios.

Author Details

Author Details

Perry, Anne

"I was born in Blackheath, London England in October 1938. At that time my name was Juliet Hulme, but after the tragedies and errors of my childhood about which I have already said all there is to say, I took my stepfather's name of Perry, and Anne Perry is not a pen name but my legal and only name.

I have been asked questions occassionally about the film, 'Heavenly Creatures', but I cannot answer them. Neither I nor my family and friends knew anything about it until the day before it was released, and I have preferred not to see it, or comment on the accuracy or otherwise of anypart of it. I am very grateful to that vast majority of generous people who allow me to move on and leave that grief behind.

I spent my earliest years moving around a bit during and immediately after the war. At aged six I was severely ill, so much so that the doctor told my mother he would be back in the morning to sign my death certificate.

However I had a lot more illness, and at eight I was sent to the Bahamas to live with a family who fostered me, and thus saved my life. After the Bahamas they moved to a private island off the coast of New Zealand, where I lived a Swiss Family Robinson style of independence. We did a lot of fishing, building, boating ect.

By the time I was ten, I had missed three years schooling. Fortunately my mother had taught me to read and write by the time I was four, so I always loved books, and was able to catch up.

However at thirteen I became ill again and was off school from then on. So that may be of some encouragement to those who had missed much formal education. In many areas it is possible to catch up, even to do well, especially if you have parents who encourage you, which I certainly did have.

Although I had various jobs there was never anything I seriously wished to do except write. It was my father who was responsible for encouraging me to write my ideas down. However, I was in my twenties before I started putting together the first semblance of a book, I was living in the county of Northumberland, in a small town called Hexham, not far from Hadrian's wall, when I started writing the first draft of Tathea. When I did finally begin that book in earnest, just a few years ago, I was able to use the original manuscript for reference.

It took many years before my first book was accepted for publication, by which time I was in my late thirties. During those years I had various jobs in order to earn an income: clerical, retail selling, fashion, air stewardess, ship and shore stewardess, limousine dispatcher and insurance underwriter.

I began writing mysteries set in Victorian London on a suggestion from my stepfather as to who Jack the Ripper might have been. I found that I was totally absorbed by what happens to people under pressure of investigation, how old relationships and trusts are eroded, and new ones formed. The Cater Street Hangman, the first to be accepted for publication and came out in 1979. I don't know how many books I wrote before that. I do remember how thrilled I was when I finally had one in print!

I began the 'Monk' series in order to explore a different , darker character, and to raise questions about responsibility, particularly that of a person for acts he cannot remember. How much of a person's identity is bound up in memory? All our reactions, decisions, etc. spring from what we know, have experienced. We are in so may ways the sum of all we have been!

I lived in Southern California for five years - and loved it, then returned to England when my stepfather became seriously ill.

I have continued with the Victorian mysteries because I have come to love both the characters and the period. I like the contrast between glamour and squalor, the endless variety in the capital of Empire, largest post in the world, with men and goods for every quarter of the earth, and the immense energy of optimism.

I have loved the whole series because it is in a way the end of history and the beginning of the modern world, a time in Eurpoe of unprecedented challange and change, a test of who we are, and who we wish to be.

I have lots of ideas ahead, but I am not ready to spek about them yet. My publisher has to be the first to know. But I shall continue the Pitts, Monks, and Christmas novellas as long as anyone is still interested in reading them.

Tathea and Come Armageddon are entire in themselves, and reflect more than anything else I have written, my religious and philosophical beliefs, and there for I care about them in a unique way. They have caused people to ask if I am a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints - yes, I am, and have been for about forty years."