Bøger af Christopher Bush
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- A Ludovic Travers Mystery
143,95 kr. ';Send someone here quick. There's been a murder!'Mr Lewton is dead. Stabbed through the back, no possibility of suicideand no sign of a knife either. The deceased made a phone call summoning a doctor immediately before his own death. And the servant who supposedly reported the murder wasn't even at the scene of the crime, and denies all knowledge. These are among the bizarre opening features of a classic labyrinthine whodunit from a master of the genrean adventure into which master sleuth Ludovic Travers must plunge himself. This is a tale of cake and conundrum in which every suspect has a water-tight alibi. But trust Travers to solve a virtually unbreakable mystery.The Case of the 100% Alibis was originally published in 1934. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.';Seldom, if ever, has the alibi problem been handled so deftly or in such an entertaining manner as Mr. Bush has done in this grade A yarn,'--New York Times
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- 143,95 kr.
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- A Ludovic Travers Mystery
143,95 kr. ';Murder is easy. It's child's play to commit murder and get away with it.'Unpleasant uncle Hubert is murdered while playing cardsand surrounded by any number of relatives who stand to gain by his death. An impossible crime, it seems, though it turns out three of his nephews were intending to despatch the old tyrant anyway! In this classic country house whodunit, the redoubtable Ludovic Travers will have to wade through a quagmire of clues and red herrings, and employ his most impressive deductive powers if he is to unmask and prove the murderer.The Case of the Chinese Gong was originally published in 1935. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.';Those who like difficult puzzles will find it wholly satisfactory.'--New York Times
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- 143,95 kr.
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- A Ludovic Travers Mystery
143,95 kr. ';It was some sort of sudden death?'Travers made a face. ';It certainly was sudden. I'll say it's ten to one it was murder.'Ludovic Travers is asked by an old school friend, Henry Dryden, to investigate the cause of the agitation in the formerly placid village of Bableigh not to mention the gunshot death, ruled an accident, of Dryden's friend Tom Yeoman, the local impoverished squire. Even after Travers and ex-CID associate John Franklin arrive in Bableigh, however, the spell of unfortunate village ';accidents' continues. And now there are rumours of a witches' coven, right in the heart of the community Can Ludo and Franklin solve the mystery of the strange malaise that has afflicted the unfortunate Bableigh, and return the community to its previous state of pastoral grace?The Case of the Unfortunate Village was originally published in 1932. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.
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- 143,95 kr.
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- A Ludovic Travers Mystery
143,95 kr. I am going to commit a murder. I offer no apology for the curtness of the statement.An individual taking the name ';Marius' boasts in a series of letters that he will commit the Perfect Murder, daring Scotland Yard detectives to catch him if they can. Ex-CID officer John Franklin and the amateur but astute detective Ludovic Travers will need to draw conclusons from a soiled letter, a locked room murder, four cast-iron alibis, and trips to France, in a feverish search for the killer and proof of his misdeedsbefore ';Marius' can strike again.The Perfect Murder Case was originally published in 1929. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.';All the points of the good detective story are here excitement, ingenuity, suspense, crescendo, and a satisfactory conclusion.' Observer
- Bog
- 143,95 kr.