A list of books I've read recently with some occasional gibberish thrown in.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
THE FOUR FALSE WEAPONS - John Dickson Carr
If you like locked room mysteries or old fashioned crime stories with no gratuitous violence, you'll like this book.
Published in 1948, its from the 'golden age' of the crime novel. Clever plots revolving around a corpse that nobody in the novel is particuarly fond of - so there's no mourning or anything like that, just the unravelling of 'who dunnit'.
John Dickson Carr or Carter Dickson or Carr Dickson or Roger Fairbairn was a prolific crime writer , he wrote approximately 70 crime novels, plus plays and short story collections.
This novel here features a corpse which of course has been murdered, with a plethora of murder weapons and suspects.
It is left up to ex-Surete master detective Henri Bencolin to solve it. This French detective is no where as annoying as the Belgium detective created by a contemporary of Mr. Carr's.
But solve it he does and it takes some figuring out.
The most interesting thing in the book is a card game called Basset, which is very rarely played due to the fact that it can ruin a punter very quickly. But the explanation and the card play itself are much better that anything Ian Fleming wrote in Casino Royale.
And lastly, this was first published in 1948 but the edition I have is a Great Pan published in 1961 and I just love the art work and the effort that went into the covers of these novels.
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THE SECRET LIFE OF J.EDGAR HOOVER - Anthony Summers
A man who abused his position like no other public servant in history. A vile little man.
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This is a collection of late Sherlock Holmes stories with the last one, this collections title, published in 1917....
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Paris,a winter night in 1938: a murder/suicide at a discreet lover's hotel. But this is no romantic tragedy -...
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Kenneth Grahame was born in 1859 in Edinburgh, Scotland. The adventure of Ratty, Mole, Badger, Toad and friends ...
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