Bookbot

The Hospital Murders

Paramètres

  • 194pages
  • 7 heures de lecture

En savoir plus sur le livre

A string of deaths in the same bed at a hospital may mean murder! A nurse volunteers to spend the night in the bed to investigate... "[MURDER WITHOUT WEAPONS, by Means Davis is] an alternative classic that I wish I'd known about when I was writing the [Gun in Cheek] books; I could have done an entire chapter on it and THE HOSPITAL MURDERS, which I've also since read." -- Bill Pronzini Means Davis was the pen name of Augusta Tucker Townsend (1904-1999), a best-selling author who brought national attention to the Johns Hopkins Medical School with the novel Miss Susie Slagle's. A daughter of the Deep South, the former Augusta Tucker moved to Baltimore during the Depression to be part of a literary circle that included Gerald Johnson, Ogden Nash, R. P. Harriss and H. L. Mencken. Besides novels and short stories, Mrs. Townsend also wrote a guide, It Happened at Hopkins: A Teaching Hospital, and more than 300 newspaper and magazine feature articles, book reviews and opinion-editorials.

Édition

Achat du livre

The Hospital Murders, Means Davis

Langue
Année de publication
2017
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(souple)
Nous vous informerons par e-mail dès que nous l’aurons retrouvé.

Modes de paiement

Personne n'a encore évalué .Évaluer

Titre
The Hospital Murders
Langue
Anglais
Publié
2017
Format
souple
Pages
194
ISBN10
1479427357
ISBN13
9781479427352
Séries
Description
A string of deaths in the same bed at a hospital may mean murder! A nurse volunteers to spend the night in the bed to investigate... "[MURDER WITHOUT WEAPONS, by Means Davis is] an alternative classic that I wish I'd known about when I was writing the [Gun in Cheek] books; I could have done an entire chapter on it and THE HOSPITAL MURDERS, which I've also since read." -- Bill Pronzini Means Davis was the pen name of Augusta Tucker Townsend (1904-1999), a best-selling author who brought national attention to the Johns Hopkins Medical School with the novel Miss Susie Slagle's. A daughter of the Deep South, the former Augusta Tucker moved to Baltimore during the Depression to be part of a literary circle that included Gerald Johnson, Ogden Nash, R. P. Harriss and H. L. Mencken. Besides novels and short stories, Mrs. Townsend also wrote a guide, It Happened at Hopkins: A Teaching Hospital, and more than 300 newspaper and magazine feature articles, book reviews and opinion-editorials.