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An ingenious country house mystery
keeps the reader on tenterhooks from the very first page NEW YORK TIMES J. Jefferson Farjeon is quite unsurpassed for creepy skill in mysterious adventures DOROTHY L. SAYERS The much-revered crime writer J. Jefferson Farjeons second crime novel back in print for the first time in almost a century. To Brambles, a dilapidated yet comfortable English country house, come the uninvited guests: a motley crew, who appear at the most unexpected hours and on the most impossible errands. Singly and in procession they arrive to trouble the calm of Ambrose Blythe, sexagenarian owner of Brambles, and of Peter Haslam, his house guest. Add to these an imperturbable butler, a tragic-eyed damsel and the super-logician Detective Grant to complete the ingredients of the perfect Golden Age of Crime story. ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Joseph Jefferson Farjeon was born into a literary family in Hampstead, north west London in 1883. He was a prolific crime writer, writing over sixty novels over the course of thirty years, many published by William Collins & Sons and featuring in their hugely popular Collins Crime Club. Dorothy L. Sayers said of his work, every word is entertaining. His best-known novel (and play) NUMBER 17, was made into a film by Alfred Hitchcock. He died in 1955. PRAISE FOR J. JEFFERSON FARJEON: Jefferson Farjeon writes thrills enhanced by good writing, good humour, and good character sketches THE SUNDAY TIMES; A Sherlock Holmes novel of the first degree NEW YORK POST; This delightful writer delivers the goods once again THE DAILY HERALD; Mystery in White is the perfect book for a winter's evening, a cosy chair and an open fire THE DAILY MAIL; An undiluted joy
Ben is the plum of the book; his personality impresses itself upon the imagination LIVERPOOL POST; A top-hole thriller by a writer who knows his job THE DAILY EXPRESS.
Genre: Mystery
Genre: Mystery
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