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The Bloody Tower
(1938)(The Tower of Evil)
(Book 29 in the Dr. Priestley series)A novel by John Rhode
The Bloody Tower by John Rhode, also published as The Tower of Evil
"Any murder planned by Mr. Rhode is bound to be ingenious." - The Observer
The old man dragged his dilapidated chair to the window. With difficulty, he slowly extended a gnarled, shaking hand and pointed toward a distant, formless bulk outlined against the sunset. "The tower still stands," he said in a high-pitched, quivering voice, which seemed to conceal a note of triumph.
Strange words from a man who has just been told that his eldest son lies dead, killed by the inescapable explosion of his own shotgun. To be sure, the body had been found near the tower, but what could be the significance of this ungainly structure that the old man should mention it so mysteriously? Could the key exist within the old letter bearing biblical citations alongside a cipher of odd, hand-drawn shapes.
Subsequent developments draw Jimmy Waghorn and Inspector Hanslet far from the actual crime scene in their search for the murderer. When they finally bring their theory to that intrepid scientist-detective, Dr. Priestley, he offers a strangely enigmatic suggestion which throws new light on the case and sets them on the track of an amazing discovery.
"There are times when I think he is the finest detective story writer of them all." - The Manchester Evening Star
"He must hold the record for the invention of ingenious ways of taking life." - The Sunday Times
"It is the soundness of his method that keeps him in the front rank of detective story artists." - The London News
Also by John Rhode:
Death on the Boat Train
Fatal Descent (with John Dickson Carr)
The Harvest Murder
Dr. Priestley Lays a Trap
Death Sits on the Board
Genre: Mystery
"Any murder planned by Mr. Rhode is bound to be ingenious." - The Observer
The old man dragged his dilapidated chair to the window. With difficulty, he slowly extended a gnarled, shaking hand and pointed toward a distant, formless bulk outlined against the sunset. "The tower still stands," he said in a high-pitched, quivering voice, which seemed to conceal a note of triumph.
Strange words from a man who has just been told that his eldest son lies dead, killed by the inescapable explosion of his own shotgun. To be sure, the body had been found near the tower, but what could be the significance of this ungainly structure that the old man should mention it so mysteriously? Could the key exist within the old letter bearing biblical citations alongside a cipher of odd, hand-drawn shapes.
Subsequent developments draw Jimmy Waghorn and Inspector Hanslet far from the actual crime scene in their search for the murderer. When they finally bring their theory to that intrepid scientist-detective, Dr. Priestley, he offers a strangely enigmatic suggestion which throws new light on the case and sets them on the track of an amazing discovery.
"There are times when I think he is the finest detective story writer of them all." - The Manchester Evening Star
"He must hold the record for the invention of ingenious ways of taking life." - The Sunday Times
"It is the soundness of his method that keeps him in the front rank of detective story artists." - The London News
Also by John Rhode:
Death on the Boat Train
Fatal Descent (with John Dickson Carr)
The Harvest Murder
Dr. Priestley Lays a Trap
Death Sits on the Board
Genre: Mystery
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