• The Cat of the Baskervilles

  • By: Vicki Delany
  • Narrated by: Kim Hicks
  • Length: 8 hrs and 19 mins
  • 4.3 out of 5 stars (117 ratings)

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The Cat of the Baskervilles  By  cover art

The Cat of the Baskervilles

By: Vicki Delany
Narrated by: Kim Hicks
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Publisher's summary

Legendary stage and movie star Sir Nigel Bellingham arrives on Cape Cod to star in a stage production of The Hound of the Baskervilles put on by the West London Theater Festival. When Sir Nigel, some of the cast, and the director visit the Sherlock Holmes Bookshop at 222 Baker Street, Gemma Doyle realizes that Sir Nigel is not at all suited to the role. He's long past his prime and an old drunk to boot. The cast is not happy, but the show must go on.

Before the play opens, Jayne's mother arranges a fundraising afternoon tea to be catered by Mrs. Hudson's Tea Room. The tea is a huge success, but, when it's time to leave, Sir Nigel has gone missing - only to be found at the bottom of the rocky cliff, dead. When the police focus their attention on Jayne's mother despite numerous other suspects, the game is once again afoot, and it's up to Gemma and Jayne to clear Jayne's mother's name.

©2018 Vicki Delany (P)2018 Dreamscape Media, LLC

What listeners say about The Cat of the Baskervilles

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Worst narrative

Why did they change the narrator. Ruined the book. Can’t read as my more with that narrator. What a shame

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4 people found this helpful

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    2 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

The heroin is a beat not too many people likes her. I only stayed till the end to see if written gets th back together

I liked the first two books. This one not at all and the narrator is bad I will return this book

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2 people found this helpful

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

I need to at least like the main character

This woman, Ms Doyle-who calls herself ‘observant’ and claims some sort of Sherlockian ability to assimilate observations into crime solutions- is actually an insufferable know it all! I could not see it through to the end, but I am sure she solved the murder, and of course taught the police a lesson or 3 about crime solving.
Also, the narrator here often exchanges Alabama for Cape Cod, when attempting accent

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2 people found this helpful

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    2 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Reader very inconsistent.

I am on chapter four and am not going to listen to the rest of the book. Because of the readers inconsistent style I cannot get the volume adjusted. With my earbudsvon one minute I can barely hear what she is saying and the next shes too loud. Frustrating to the point that I cannot enjoy or even focus on the story. Just not worth the constant volume changes.

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1 person found this helpful

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    2 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Bad narration

The somewhat pedestrian plot is further destroyed by a dismal narrative performance. They need to bring back the reader of the first two books.

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  • ps
  • 04-22-21

Narrator Change Ruins Story

The first two books of this series had a young narrator, portraying Gemma in her early thirties. Suddenly, for book three, Gemma sounds like she is in her late fifties! The motherly or grandmotherly approach to the bookstore, the theatre production, and the other characters was jarring. Any romantic relationship with Grant or Ryan seemed creepy. I definitely won’t continue listening to this series.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Yet Another Strong Holmes Pastiche

Gemma Doyle, proprietor and co-owner of the Sherlock Holmes Bookshop and Emporium returns in Vicki Delany's The Cat of the Baskervilles, set in West London, Massachusetts, where the West London Theater Festival is putting on a stage production of The Hound of the Baskervilles. They have hired Sir Nigel Bellingham, whose claim to fame was having starred as the general 40 years earlier in the movie trilogy Roman Wars. But when Sir Nigel comes to West London and the Sherlock Holmes Bookshop and Emporium, Gemma and the Sir Nigel enthuasts discover that the man is drunk and not the most affable.

But then Jayne Wilson, Gemma's best friend and partner in Mrs. Hudson's Tea Room, gets thrilled to be invited to cater an afternoon tea at the home of Rebecca Stanton, president of the theater festival, to raise money for the costs of putting on this play. With 130 people to cater for, Jayne, Gemma, and their staff stay busy wining and dining the guests, who each paid $200 to attend and meet the great Sir Nigel, who arrives intoxicated and gets drunker throughout the course of the afternoon. When tea is finished, they ask Sir Nigel to give a recitation from The Hound of the Baskervilles, but he proves unable to do so, whether because of his drunken state or his poor knowledge of the play. Fortunately, Eddie, his understudy, steps in and impresses everyone.

As the program has ended, Gemma begins to wonder what has happened to Sir Nigel and goes out searching, along with her friend Grant, a rare book collector. As they near the cliff, they spot a red cravat on a bush near the edge and, bending over, see the body of Sir Nigel on the rocks at the bottom of the cliff. As Grant goes to summon the police, Gemma ckimbs down to the body, just in case he is still alive. But not only does she find him dead, she finds a small piece of one of the aprons used by the serving staff, making this potential murder personal to Gemma. And then as the police zero in on Leslie Wilson, Jayne's mother, Gemma determines to get to the truth before her best friend's mother may get arrested.

The Cat of the Baskervilles is another delightful addition to Elementary, She Read and The Body at Baker's Street. I love this particular pastiche of the Sherlock Holmes books and am impressed by the way Gemma plays Holmes without seeing herself as a Holmes character. Her relationship with Jayne develops throughout the course of the book, and it is nice to see the two as real people. Further, we see the way Detective Louise Estrada shows her ever- growing hatred and resentment of Gemma, while Gemma's ex-boyfriend, Detective Ryan Ashburton, tries to find a legitimate balance between the two.

The plot contains many interesting angles, which kept me drawn to the book and unable to put it down. I was intrigued by all the deductions and especially loved the ending. This book was a little less riveting than the previous books, but perhaps that was a result of my already having read the previous two books and not being as surprised by Gemma's gifts.

Kim Hicks performs the audio version of this book. I confess to preferring the work of Kelly Clare, who narrated the first two books, but Hicks does a good job. The role requires someone able to handle both a British and an American accent.

I really had fun with The Cat of the Baskervilles. This book created plenty of delight as I listened to it. The characters and the plot joined together to make the book a great listening experience. I give it five stars.

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1 person found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Best thing about the book was its title

I was so disappointed. Not much of a mystery. Too bad: characters and setting are charming. Unless I am hopelessly gaga and missed something huge, the cat in the title had nothing to do with solving the mystery and nothing to do with the saga of the Baskervilles. Is that a plot spoiler? Anyhow...I expected something both spooky and clever based on the title.The story was neither. Kim Hicks, one of my favorite British narrators, seemed lost with New England and California accents, which also surprised me. I might try another book in the series, because I did like the setting and characters, however, it won't be soon.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Disappointed in the narrator

I couldn't get into the story after being used to a younger, less snobby sounding narrator. I'm sure she's fine, but I was used to a different point of view. I won't continue the series. I really liked the series too.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Please change narrator

For some reason, they have a new narrator for the series and it honestly kind of ruins the whole experience. She is a good narrator objectively, but she’s completely the wrong voice for this series. She’s aged the main character by forty years stylistically, and the voices for the other characters are dreadful. It is very hard to get through because I’m completely taken out of the story by how incompatible the narration fits with a series I was really starting to love. I see they are staying with the new narrator for the next five books, and I am so disappointed. I don’t know if I can keep on listening. I started book four, and it’s kind of painful.

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