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  • av Dorothy Evelyn Smith
    175,-

  • av Dorothy Lambert
    168

  • av Celia Buckmaster
    168

  • av Ruth Adam
    168

  • - A Ludovic Travers Mystery
    av Christopher Bush
    168

  • - A Ludovic Travers Mystery
    av Christopher Bush
    168

  • - A Ludovic Travers Mystery
    av Christopher Bush
    168

  • - A Ludovic Travers Mystery
    av Christopher Bush
    168

  • - A Ludovic Travers Mystery
    av Christopher Bush
    168

  • - A Ludovic Travers Mystery
    av Christopher Bush
    168

  • - A Ludovic Travers Mystery
    av Christopher Bush
    168

  • - A Ludovic Travers Mystery
    av Christopher Bush
    168

  • - A Ludovic Travers Mystery
    av Christopher Bush
    168

  • - A Golden Age Murder
    av Henrietta Clandon
    168

    “A lot of quiet people are sitting about talking, and one of them suddenly feels there will be murder done. And it was!”The narrator of This Delicate Murder is Penny Mercer, murder-mystery author. She and novelist-husband Vincent are invited by Lionel Fonders to a shooting-party at Chustable Manor, where the other guests are mostly fellow-writers of various types. But Penny and Vincent become embroiled in a vexing murder case when their host is fatally shot in the field. Fonders was not generally beloved, but it is Vincent himself who becomes the chief suspect in his host’s unnatural death.In his attempt to clear himself, he enlist the help of clever attorney and amateur sleuth William Power to find the fiend who put paid to Fonders. With so many jealous authors at hand, the field of suspicion is wide. Can you keep pace with Power?“Nearly watertight impeccability” Observer“Henrietta Clandon’s novels are always welcome. She has developed a style of her own in crime fiction.” Anthony Berkeley

  • - A Golden Age Mystery
    av Henrietta Clandon
    168

  • - A Golden Age Mystery
    av Henrietta Clandon
    168

  • - A Golden Age Mystery
    av Henrietta Clandon
    168

  • - A Golden Age Mystery
    av Moray Dalton
    168

  • - A Golden Age Mystery
    av Moray Dalton
    168

  • - A Golden Age Mystery
    av Moray Dalton
    168

  • - A Golden Age Mystery
    av Moray Dalton
    168

  • - A Golden Age Mystery
    av Moray Dalton
    168

  • av M.A. Radford & E.
    168

  • - A Golden Age Mystery
    av E. & M.A. Radford
    168

  • - A Golden Age Mystery
    av M.A. Radford & E.
    168

  • av Roy Horniman
    155

    That man is fortunate who has the world against him.Israel Rank has many advantages and qualities which should enable an ordinary man to get through life quite successfully. But he's not content to be an ordinary man. He's a distant heir to the Gascoyne earldom, and he will not rest until he inherits it, lock, stock and barrel. One tiny problem: he must kill everyone in line before him, without getting caught. The result is an evergreen classic of blackly comic crime fiction.First published in 1907 as ';Israel Rank: The Autobiography of a Criminal', the novel is probably best known as inspiration for the classic Ealing comedy Kind Hearts and Coronets, frequently voted one of the greatest British films ever. The novel itself remains a remarkably fresh satire that reverses conventional morality a sympathetic comedy about a serial killer.';A superb thriller, but also a disturbing study in human nature. The narrative pace never slackens, thanks to the spareness and elegance of Horniman's prose . . . (the novel is) over all too quickly.' Simon Heffer

  • av D.E. Stevenson
    170

    ';I like Mureth,' declared Lady Shaw. ';There's something about Mureth.'';It does things to people,' Mamie agreed.Lady Shaw considered this. It sounded silly, but was it really silly. People said that Mamie Johnstone was a fool, and it was true that sometimes she said things that sounded foolish but the things she did were wise.Mamie Johnstone, sister of Caroline Dering whom we met in Vittoria Cottage, and her husband Jock are popular figures in the village of Mureth, not far from the town of Drumburly in the Scottish Borders. Jock and Mamie have no children to inherit their farm, so they have adopted Caroline's son James. But James arrives at Mureth a bit shell-shocked from having proposed to Rhoda Ware, a successful London artist he has loved for years, and being refused. James buries himself in farming with Jock, and takes comfort in the company of Holly Douglas, a niece of the local gentry.Fortunately for all involved, there is Mamie to do wise things and ensure that all is put right in the end! This new edition features an introduction by Alexander McCall Smith.';Mistress of the light novel' The Times

  • av D.E. Stevenson
    168

    Caroline opened the door and saw Mr. Shepperton standing on the step. ';Oh, it's you!' she exclaimed in surprise.';Did youwere you expecting someone else?' he asked.';Only the Queen,' replied Caroline, chuckling. ';Don't mind me,' she added. ';I often go slightly mad.'Caroline Dering, a widow with three grown children, lives a cheerful, quiet life near the idyllic English village of Ashbridge. But things are about to liven up, as daughter Leda announces a problematic engagement to the son of the local squire, son James returns from service and pursues romance with the squire's independent daughter, and sister Harriet, a famous actress who latest play has bombed, retreats to Ashbridge for a break. Then there's Robert Shepperton, a charming widower recovering from the losses of war at the local inn . . .These problems, as well as smaller challenges with an overbearing village organizer, the blustering Sir Michael, and Caroline's daily help (';who rejoices in the name of Comfort Podbury'), are resolved with all of D.E. Stevenson's flair for gentle humour, clever plotting, and characters who walk right off the page.Furrowed Middlebrow and Dean Street Press have also reprinted Music in the Hills and Winter and Rough Weather, which continue the stories of some of the characters from Vittoria Cottage. All the novels feature an introduction by Alexander McCall Smith.';A well-balanced novel that moves swiftly enough for any taste.' Manchester Evening News';It is a family novel, and few writers can do this sort of thing better than Miss Stevenson.' Glasgow Herald

  • av Doris Langley Moore
    168

    ';My finest, ferocious Caravaggio style'that was his own phrase for his later manner; and that was the style I was aiming at, an interplay of light and shadow that would rivet the attention and, ultimately, draw the eye to darkness.At the beginning of Doris Langley Moore's deliriously entertaining final novel, bookseller and author Quentin Williams has just received the royalties (just over GBP4) from his two published biographies. In his resulting doldrums he perversely tries to impress a smug American manuscript dealer, hinting that he may have unearthed a copy of Lord Byron's lost memoirs, famously burned by his friends just after his death. Buying time with elaborate tales about the manuscript's location, he sets about an audacious forgery, focusing on the scandalous style of Byron's later writings.Quentin is also trying to impress his girlfriend, a smart, beautiful model who may very well be out of his league and whose savvy intellect, when Quentin piques her interest in Byron, becomes his biggest obstacle. The unforeseen complications of his deception culminate at a gathering of elite Byron scholarsincluding none other than Doris Langley Moore herself! This new edition features an introduction by Sir Roy Strong.

  • av Doris Langley Moore
    175,-

    ';There are some embroidered waistcoats . . . They are very old. A museum might be glad of them. . . . There are some pictures too,' Mrs. Hovenden brought out with a fresh effort, ';oil paintings that were in the rector's family.'The kindness of Dr George Sandilands towards an elderly patient, and her insistence on repaying him with the detritus of her attic, sets in motion a comedy of errors that rocks the art world. Dr Sandilands finally accepts a stack of begrimed paintings, to the horror of his eldest daughter, a stern housekeeper. But his younger daughter is prepared to be swept up in the romance of old treasures, and her boss, an amateur art connoisseur, develops a theory about the artworks and clings to it like a dog with a bone. Enter an art expert who's not above some shady maneuvers, his adoring secretary, the director of the local art museum, and a sleazy London dealer.Doris Langley Moore has packed her unpredictable, compulsively readable plot with subtlety, wit, and insight, and with an array of characters both lovable and so delectably nefarious that they're begging for their just deserts. All Done by Kindness is a rollicking masterpiece of tight plotting and unexpected machinations. This new edition features an introduction by Sir Roy Strong.

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