Last Ditch
Title | Last Ditch PDF eBook |
Author | Ngaio Marsh |
Publisher | Inspector Roderick Alleyn |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2016 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 9781631940521 |
Roderick Alleyn's son Ricky Alleyn is now 21, and has taken himself off to a secluded island to write a novel. Or think about writing a novel. Or look for distractions so he can avoid writing a novel. The distractions abound, mostly in the form of colorful local characters, until Ricky stumbles across a murder and then gets himself kidnapped. Which is too bad for Ricky (and the murder-victim), but it brings Inspector Alleyn to the island. A subtheme involving drug-running may strike a jarring note, but Last Ditch was first published in 1977, and as such, it offers a remarkable look at what happens when the characters and conventions of the Golden Age fetch up in the distinctly tarnished present.
Photo Finish
Title | Photo Finish PDF eBook |
Author | Ngaio Marsh |
Publisher | |
Pages | 274 |
Release | 1980 |
Genre | Alleyn, Roderick (Fictitious character) |
ISBN | 9780316546805 |
The murder of a famous opera soprano finds Inspector Alleyn crawling around backstage in her life, interviewing agents, past lovers, servants, and others hoping to learn who dispatched La Sommita with her own stiletto.
Black As He’s Painted (The Ngaio Marsh Collection)
Title | Black As He’s Painted (The Ngaio Marsh Collection) PDF eBook |
Author | Ngaio Marsh |
Publisher | HarperCollins UK |
Pages | 294 |
Release | 2010-01-07 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 0007344848 |
One of Ngaio Marsh’s most popular novels, this time featuring one of her best creations – Lucy Lockett, the crime-solving cat.
Women of Mystery
Title | Women of Mystery PDF eBook |
Author | Martha Hailey DuBose |
Publisher | Macmillan + ORM |
Pages | 504 |
Release | 2000-12-11 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 0312276559 |
In this remarkable book, Martha Hailey DuBose has given those multitudes of readers who love the mystery novel an indispensable addition to their libraries. Unlike other works on the subject, Women of Mystery is not merely a directory of the novelists and their publications with a few biographical details. DuBose combines extensive research into the lives of significant women mystery writers from Anna Katherine Green and Mary Roberts Rinehart with critical essays on their work, anecdotes, contemporary reviews and opinions and some of the women's own comments. She takes us through the Golden Age of the British women mystery writers, Christie, Sayers, Marsh, Allingham and Tey, to the leading crime novelists of today, focused on the women who have become legends of the genre. And though she laments, "so many mysteries, so little time," she makes a good effort a mentioning "some of the best of the rest." When DuBose writes of the lives of her principal players, she relates them to their times, their families, their personal situations and above all to their books. She subtly points out that Sayers, whose experience with the men in her life was inevitably disastrous, created in Lord Peter the ideal lover -- one who is all that a woman desires and needs. DuBose gives us the curriculum vitae that Dorothy Sayers created to help her bring Peter Wimsey to a virtual actuality. Ngaio Marsh would give up an active presence in the theatrical world she loved, but she recreated it for herself as well as her readers in many of her novels. The biographies of these woman are as engrossing as the stories they wrote, and Martha DuBose has shined a different, intimate and intriguing light on them, their works, and the lives that informed those works. This book is so full of treasure it's hard to see how any mystery enthusiast will be able to do without it. And what a gift it would make for anyone on your list who has been heard to announce "I love a mystery." Some of the treats inside: In the Beginning: The Mothers of Detection Anna Katherine Green Mary Roberts Rinehart A Golden Era: The Genteel Puzzlers Agatha Christie Dorothy L. Sayers Ngaio Marsh Margery Allingham Josephine Tey Modern Motives: Mysteries of the Murderous Mind Patricia Highsmith P.D. James Ruth Rendell Mary Higgins Clark Sue Grafton and more!!
Light Thickens
Title | Light Thickens PDF eBook |
Author | Ngaio Marsh |
Publisher | Macmillan Reference USA |
Pages | 381 |
Release | 1983 |
Genre | Alleyn, Roderick (Fictitious character) |
ISBN | 9780816135097 |
Money in the Morgue: The New Inspector Alleyn Mystery
Title | Money in the Morgue: The New Inspector Alleyn Mystery PDF eBook |
Author | Ngaio Marsh |
Publisher | HarperCollins UK |
Pages | 272 |
Release | 2018-03-08 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 0008207127 |
Roderick Alleyn is back in this unique crime novel begun by Ngaio Marsh during the Second World War and now completed by Stella Duffy in a way that has delighted reviewers and critics alike.
Detecting the Social
Title | Detecting the Social PDF eBook |
Author | Mary Evans |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 198 |
Release | 2018-09-15 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 3319945203 |
This book analyses the ways in which twenty-first century detective fiction provides an understanding of the increasingly complex and often baffling contemporary world — and what sociology, as a discipline, can learn from it. Conventional sociological accounts of fiction generally comprehend its value in terms of the ways in which it can illustrate, enlarge or help to articulate a particular social theory. Evans, Moore, and Johnstone suggest a different approach, and demonstrate that by taking a group of detective novels, we can unveil so far unidentified, but crucial, theoretical ideas about what it means to be an individual in the twenty-first century. More specifically, the authors argue that detective fiction of the last forty years illuminates the effects of urban isolation and separation, the invisibility of institutional power, financial insecurity, and the failure of public authorities to protect people. In doing so, this body of fiction traces out the fault-lines in our social arrangements, rehearses our collective fears, and captures a mood of restless disquiet. By engaging with detective stories in this way, the book revisits ideas about the promise and purpose of sociology.