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Cyril Hare

    4 septembre 1900 – 25 août 1958

    L'auteur s'est imposé comme un écrivain de romans policiers célébré, connu pour son observation perspicace de la vie et de la nature humaine. Ses œuvres sont louées pour leurs intrigues intelligentes, leurs commentaires éclairés sur les nuances sociales et leur prose élégante. Il a créé des personnages mémorables qui donnent vie à des récits captivants pleins de rebondissements. Son expérience juridique apporte authenticité et profondeur à ses histoires, consolidant son statut de maître du genre.

    When the Wind Blows
    That Yew Tree's Shade
    Death Is No Sportsman
    Best Detective Stories of Cyril Hare
    With a Bare Bodkin
    Tenant for Death
    • Tenant for Death

      • 206pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      4,0(4)Évaluer

      Tenant for Death (1937) was the debut crime novel by 'Cyril Hare', nom de plume of Alfred Gordon Clark and one of the best-loved names in English 'Golden Age' crime writing.

      Tenant for Death
    • With a Bare Bodkin

      • 204pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,5(2)Évaluer

      The Blitz has forced the evacuation of various government offices from London and Pettigrew accompanies his ministry to the distant seaside resort of Marsett Bay. In this strange atmosphere, Pettigrew begins to fall in love with his secretary, who is also being courted by a widowed man much older than her.

      With a Bare Bodkin
    • Best Detective Stories of Cyril Hare

      • 272pages
      • 10 heures de lecture
      3,5(2)Évaluer

      These thirty stories, selected and introduced by fellow crime writer and lawyer Michael Gilbert, are a terrific introduction to Cyril Hare's inventive and clever Golden Age detective fiction, which often turns on an ingenious use of the law.

      Best Detective Stories of Cyril Hare
    • Death is No Sportsman (1938) was the second crime novel by 'Cyril Hare', nom de plume of Alfred Gordon Clark and one of the best-loved names in English 'Golden Age' crime writing. The banks of the river Didder in the summertime appear idyllic: the sun is shining, the trout rising.

      Death Is No Sportsman
    • That Yew Tree's Shade

      • 204pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,4(3)Évaluer

      Gordon Clark was a county judge at the time of the novel's compositionWhen Francis Pettigrew, former barrister and sometime amateur detective, is plucked out of peaceful retirement in the Home Counties to deputise for the County Court judge, the proceedings offer him some unexpected insights into the lives of his new neighbours.

      That Yew Tree's Shade
    • When the Wind Blows

      • 256pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      4,0(27)Évaluer

      Famous solo violinist Lucy Carless is making a guest appearance with the provincial Markshire Orchestra, only to be found strangled with a silk stocking part-way through the concert.

      When the Wind Blows
    • Suicide Excepted

      • 234pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,2(5)Évaluer

      An Inspector Mallett mystery, originally published in 1939, by one of the best-loved Golden Age crime writers, Cyril Hare. Inspector Mallett's stay at the country house hotel of Pendlebury Old Hall has been a disappointment.

      Suicide Excepted
    • Tragedy at Law

      • 288pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      3,7(46)Évaluer

      Tragedy at Law follows a rather self-important High Court judge, Mr Justice Barber, as he moves from town to town presiding over cases in the Southern England circuit.

      Tragedy at Law
    • Untimely Death

      • 192pages
      • 7 heures de lecture
      3,5(43)Évaluer

      Francis Pettigrew travels to Exmoor for a holiday with his wife - an area in which as a young boy he was traumatised by coming across a dead body on the moor. In an attempt to exorcise this trauma, Pettigrew walks across the moor to the place where the incident occurred - only to find another dead body.

      Untimely Death
    • An English murder

      • 208pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,7(650)Évaluer

      A cozy whodunnit for fans of Agatha Christie - perfect for long, cold nights in

      An English murder