In this classic mystery from the award-winning Michael Pearce, a powerful politician is murdered in Cairo in the 1900s and the Mamur Zapt is called in to investigate Cairo, 1910. The end of the boom and everyone seems to have money troubles. Then one day a civil servant dies at his desk. Was it pressure of work or something nastier? The whiff of corruption is in the air, with even Gareth Owen, the Mamur Zapt, under suspicion... Owen's investigation takes him to the heart of a sinister organization. But will he be up to taking them on? And will he be in time to stop the Camel of Destruction running through the city?
Michael Pearce Livres
Michael Pearce a grandi dans l'ancien Soudan anglo-égyptien et y est retourné plus tard pour enseigner, conservant un intérêt pour les droits de l'homme dans la région. Récemment retraité de son poste universitaire, il se consacre désormais entièrement à l'écriture.






The Mamur Zapt and The Men Behind
- 222pages
- 8 heures de lecture
From the award-winning Michael Pearce comes an engrossing murder mystery set in the Cairo of the 1900s. After a series of attacks on public officials, the Mamur Zapt is called in to investigate. Cairo in the 1900s. While riding home, Fairclough of Customs is shot at from behind. It is the first of many similar attacks - all seemingly aimed at public officials. The Mamur Zapt, British head of Cairo's secret police, is told to catch the killer - and quickly. His efforts to do so take him into Cairo's student quarter and out to a remote rural estate. And require him to handle a fading Pasha and a dangerous gypsy girl - whose claims he has to balance against those of his fiery Egyptian mistress.
The Fig Tree Murder
- 200pages
- 7 heures de lecture
Why was the body put on the line? Did someone want to halt the progress of the New Electric Railway out from Cairo to the City of Pleasure being built in the suburbs? Old Egypt is pitted against New and in the middle is the Mamur Zapt, British head of Cairo's Secret Police
The Mingrelian Conspiracy
- 194pages
- 7 heures de lecture
A classic historical mystery from the award-winning Michael Pearce, set in the Egypt of the 1900s. When gang violence strikes the city, the inimitable Mamur Zapt is called in to investigate. In 1908, the city of Cairo lives - and dies - by its cafe culture. But for restaurant businesses, the protection rackets pose a problem. And the city's cafes are experiencing a sudden upsurge in threats from various gangs. When one cafe proprietor is attacked, his legs broken for noncompliance, everyone is worried. Then the Russian Charge files a complaint - the Mingrelians may be targeting a Russian Grand Duke. Now the Mamur Zapt, Head of the Secret Police, must find a way to prevent an international incident...
Winner of the CWA Last Laugh Award, an irresistible historical mystery in which the Mamur Zapt investigates the illegal trade of antiquities in the Cairo of the 1900s. Cairo, 1908. Captain Gareth Owen, the Mamur Zapt or head of Cairo's Secret Police, turns his attention to the illegal trade of antiquities when Miss Skinner arrives. She's a woman with the habit of asking awkward questions. But what is she doing looking for crocodiles? And mummified ones at that? Owen's new brief is to see that Egypt's priceless treasures stay in Egypt. But when Miss Skinner narrowly escapes falling under a conveyance, Owen must labour to thwart killers and face an even graver problem: whether to ask the pasha's lovely daughter to marry him....
A Dead Man in Naples
- 208pages
- 8 heures de lecture
The sixth exciting crime thriller in Michael Pearce's Dead Man series, featuring Seymour of the Special Branch
When a tourist is kidnapped from the terrace of a hotel in Edwardian Cairo, Captain Owen, Mamur Zapt, head of Egypt's political CID is called in. It is in the donkey-vous, the base of Cairo's lowly donkey-boys, that Owen finds the answer, but not quite the one he expected.
The Mamur Zapt and Night of The Dog
- 224pages
- 8 heures de lecture
Captain Owen, Mamur Zapt, the head of Political CID in Edwardian Cairo, is called in when a dog's body is found in a Coptic tomb, the ultimate Moslem insult. It is part of a pattern of harassment and murder extending up to government level, which will need all the Mamur Zapt's guile to unravel.
The Routledge Dictionary of English Language Studies
- 224pages
- 8 heures de lecture
Featuring real-world examples, this dictionary serves as a comprehensive guide to the diversity and richness of the English language. It caters to both students and general readers, highlighting various contexts in which English is used, making it an essential resource for understanding the language's nuances.
A classic historical mystery from award-winning Michael Pearce, in which the body of a young woman washes up in the Nile and the Mamur Zapt is drawn into the seedy world of Egyptian politics. Egypt, 1908. A young woman has drowned in the Nile, her body washed up on a sandbar. Apparently she had fallen off a boat. Owen, as Mamur Zapt, Britsh head of Cairo's secret police, deems it a potential crime. But when the poor girl's body suddenly vanishes from its resting place, Owen begins a puzzling search for the truth that will take him from Cairo's sophisticated cafes through its dingiest slums - and into the seething waters of Egyptian politics.