„The Keepers of the King’s Peace” is another entry in Edgar Wallace’s eminently popular „Sanders of the River” series based on British attempts to bring their administration to darkest Africa. An elite crew of officers is charged with getting to the bottom of a female shaman’s seemingly miraculous powers, but bumbling new addition Bones keeps getting in the way. Will they be able to stave off a mass rebellion before it’s too late? Always with tongue in cheek, Edgar Wallace ...
There are crimes for which no punishment is adequate, offences that the written law cannot redress. The three friends, Pioccart, Manfred and Gonsalez, may be enjoying the exotic, Spanish city of Cordova with its heat and Moorish influences, but they are still committed to employing their intellect and cunning to dispense justice. In „The Just Men of Cordova”, written in 1917, the just men move into the treacherous, aristocratic world of gambling, horse-racing and high finan...
Mr. Stratford Harlow, the colossus of British Finance, was a gentleman with no particular call to hurry. By every standard he was a member of the leisured classes, and to his opportunities for lingering, he added the desire of one who was pertinently curious. The most commonplace phenomena interested Mr. Harlow. He had all the requisite qualities of an observer; his enjoyment was without the handicap of sentimentality, a weakness which is fatal to accurate judgement. Betwee...
An enjoyable short work from Edgar Wallace, originally published in 1915. Few people today would recognize the name „Edgar Wallace” but before his death in 1933 he was a literary force to be reckoned with. He was both prolific and popular and his books reportedly sold at the rate of 5,000 a day. „The Melody of Death” is a novel about a young man who starts behaving strangely upon hearing a certain melody. Fearing that he may be suffering from cancer, Gilbert Standerton asks...
She could not yet be called a woman, but she was no longer a child under any circumstances. Curiosity spreads in the small village of Ascot when a wealthy Countess settles there. Even the private investigator John Morlay is enraptured by the young and beautiful Marie Fioli. When he is surprisingly hired by former nanny Maries Beschutzer, he sees a chance to get closer to the Countess. But his mission serves a completely different purpose... As the novel is rather short and ...
Written in 1905, this is the first of Edgar Wallace’s adventures to feature the Four Just Men, a collective of European men of position who see it as their duty to execute those criminals that, for whatever reason, the law cannot or will not touch. In this adventure, the Four Just Men set their hand against the British Foreign Secretary. Concerned that an extradition bill about to be passed into law will result in the deportation of certain leading dissidents back to their ...
Fleeing unfavorable regulation at home, American millionaire King Kerry and other American „robber barons” begin buying up London real estate and important London-based businesses, much to the dismay of their competitors and the people of the city. As his empire expands, Kerry is bedeviled by a mysterious enemy troubled by a dark secret from a past romance. Along the way we meet some good, honest people whom he brings into the fold and assists them to a better life, while d...
„The Little Green Man and Other Stories” is an excellent collection of mystery stories by Edgar Wallace. These are fast-paced, with good twists and turns, an unusual criminal scheme and a little romance. Edgar Wallace was a British novelist, playwright, and journalist who produced popular detective and suspense stories and was in his time „"the king"” of the modern thriller. Wallace’s literary output – 175 books, 24 plays, and countless articles and review sketches – have u...
Edgar Wallace was a prolific author of crime, adventure and humorous stories, whose best known creations include „The Four Just Men”, „Sanders of the River”, and „J. G. Reeder”. Although Wallace wrote many „stand alone” novels it is, perhaps, for his series based material always popular with readers that he remains best known. „The Last Adventure” is a story packed with intrigue, treachery, assassinations, and machinations, and it highlights Wallace’s unmatched skill in set...
One of the most prolific writers of the twentieth century, Edgar Wallace was an immensely popular author, who created exciting thrillers spiced with tales of treacherous crooks and hard-boiled detectives. These were largely adventure narratives with elements of crime or mystery, and usually combined a bombastic sensationalism with hammy violence. In this exciting page-turner, originally published in 1929, from the undisputed „King of Thrillers”, Edgar Wallace, we see the br...
This novella was created by Edgar Wallace, a famous British author of mystery genre. Best remembered for penning the screenplay for the classic film „King Kong”, he was an astoundingly popular luminary in the action-adventure genre in the early twentieth century. „The Man Who Killed „X"” is a story packed with intrigue, treachery, assassinations, and machinations, and it highlights Wallace’s unmatched skill in setting a pulse-pounding pace. It’s all great fun and Wallace ke...
Lew Daney, chief suspect in a jewel robbery and an ensuing murder, vanishes leaving no trace. Once he saved Mary Grier from a knife attack by a madman. Mary Grier now works at Clench House in Scotland as secretary to the miserly Mr. Arkwright, and Mr. Arkwright’s nephew and heir is „"Tiger"” Tim Jordan, an ex-Colonial police officer now holidaying in England and seeking work with Scotland Yard. Jordan doesn’t get much of a holiday but he does get the job, after proving his ...
Edgar Wallace, author of „The Lone House Mystery”, was a celebrated British author in the early twentieth century. Over 160 of his novels have been made into films, and he is known especially for his part in writing the story for the movie „King Kong”. The dead man was rich. In life he lived in a lonely house by a river. In the earth outside it is the imprint of a bare foot. His secretary, with whom he was having an affair, is locked in a room. The key is in the dead man’s ...
Few people today would recognize the name „Edgar Wallace” but before his death in 1933 he was a literary force to be reckoned with. He was both prolific and popular and his books reportedly sold at the rate of 5,000 a day. This enjoyable collection includes eight mystery stories by Edgar Wallace: „The Lady Called Nita”, „The Man Who Married His Cook”, „Mr. Sigee’s Relations”, „The Knight Who Could Not Kneel”, „Her Father’s Daughter”, „The Dramatic Butler”, „Diana Helps”, „C...
James Lexington Morlake, gentleman of leisure, Lord of the Manor of World and divers other titles which he rarely employed, unlocked the drawer of his elaborate Empire writing-table and gazed abstractedly into its depths. It was lined with steel and there were four distinct bolts. Slowly he put in his hand and took out first a folded square of black silk, then a businesslike automatic pistol, then a roll of fine leather... Suspense novel which takes the reader from London t...
John Sands needed a bride – more than that, however, he needed somebody with a criminal mind. Luckily a female convict has escaped from prison that very morning and was sitting in his house. Romance and mystery, with classic twists and turns. As is typical with Wallace, this book includes a death, a love-affair, a kidnapping, an intrepid amateur. British author Richard Horatio Edgar Wallace (1875-1932) was reportedly the second biggest seller after the Bible in his heyday. ...
The name, „Edgar Wallace”, threads through early twentieth century crime fiction like a stream that turns out to be a lot deeper and wider than you thought. During the 1920’s and 30’s, it was said that one of every four books read in England was written by Wallace, who ultimately produced 173 books and 17 plays. „The Hand of Power” is a tale about the sale of a desk designed by a butler who murdered his wife. This book has all the aspects of good mysteries from around 1930 ...
1929 short story collection by Edgar Wallace revolving around the demobbed soldier (WWI) Jack „Wireless” Bryce and his engagement by the law firm „Hemmer & Hemmer”. Operating on the fringes of lawlessness, Bryce uses his brains and brawn to protect a range of the firm’s more vulnerable and downright gullible clients. His new career as a detective creates a compelling tale of adventure. Most of his adventures involve rescuing various damsels in distress from the clutches...
In „The Green Ribbon” an insurance investigator researches the accidental death of a jockey. His inquiry leads to an illegal gambling organization, as well as the knowledge that the jockey’s death was not accidental. He also saves the life of another jockey who has been the victim of a couple of accidents. One of Edgar Wallace’s occasional horse racing novels which centers of a betting syndicate involving the jovial Mr. Trigger, the sinister Dr. Blanter, the strange Mr. Goo...
This early work by Edgar Wallace was originally published in 1929. „"The Golden Hades"” is a tale of murder and a symbol on bank notes leading to a sinister organization. This mystery novel features Wilbur Smith of the Treasury Department for Counterfeit in his investigations. Each time a crime happens be it a robbery or a murder, there is a sinister sign of Pluto (Hades) gold there... a statue of the Greek god of the underworld and the sign of dangerous gang of forgers. On...
This is an enjoyable short story by Edgar Wallace, set in England during the 1920’s. „The Green Rust”, his twelfth crime novel, is one of three books he published in 1919. It begins at the English home of the severely ill American millionaire, John Millinborn. With him are his best friend, Kitson, and a local doctor, the Dutch van Heerden. He is murdered, stabbed to death in his sick bed in the first chapter, having just left his fortune to his niece, Oliva, whom he has nev...
Another rip-roaring tale from Edgar Wallace, „The Green Archer” features a beautiful girl looking for the mother from whom she was stolen as a baby, her kindly foster-father, a redheaded journalist, a very secret policeman who is also a master of disguise, an Anglo-Indian petty criminal and his wife, assorted villains and, at the center of it all, Abel Bellamy, a very ugly, very rich man who’s bought a Garres Castle in Scotland. Running through it all is the mysterious Gree...
„The India-Rubber Men” is a gripping thriller of London’s River Police, whose swift launches patrol the Thames and guard the ships that lie in port. Inspector John Wade is given the toughest job of his life when he is assigned the task of running to earth a gang of gunmen in rubber gas-masks, rubber gloves and crepe rubber shoes, who rob banks and jewelers, and even commit murder under the very eyes of the police, and get away with it. Through it all runs the Thames, and th...
Fifth book in the J.G. Reeder series. When Larry O’Ryan decides to become a burglar he attends night school to study ballistics, then secures a job at a safe-maker’s. After three successful robberies Larry is caught by Mr. J. G. Reeder. An unlikely friendship develops and on Saturdays they can be seen together at the British Museum or the Tower. One day Larry rescues Miss Lane Leonard, daughter of a millionaire. The disappearance of one and a half million pounds in gold bul...
The name, „Edgar Wallace”, threads through early twentieth century crime fiction like a stream that turns out to be a lot deeper and wider than you thought. For many, Haynes, known as „Gunner”, is not an outlaw but a gentleman of unorthodox methods. For Scotland Yard, he is one of the most skilled thieves in the world. The Gunner and Luke Maddison belong to completely different worlds; Luke is a respectable banker with a charming girlfriend. But Luke has done a favor for th...
„The Great Reward” is thirteen quirky short stories from the master of mystery Edgar Wallace. Fast-paced, with good classic twists and turns, an unusual criminal scheme and a little romance. Edgar Wallace was a British novelist, playwright, and journalist who produced popular detective and suspense stories and was in his time „the king” of the modern thriller. Wallace’s literary output – 175 books, 24 plays, and countless articles and review sketches – have undermined his r...
Edgar Wallace was an English novelist, journalist and playwright, who was an enormously popular writer of detective, suspense stories, and practically invented the modern „thriller”. His popularity at the time was comparable to that of Charles Dickens – one of Wallace’s publishers claimed that a quarter of all books read in England were written by him. „The Governor of Chi-Foo” is a rare short story collection, long out of print which contains 16 thrilling stories: „The Wit...
Inspector Wembury’s day turns from bad to worse when a legendary assassin who was supposed dead in Australia returns to England seeking vengeance for the murder of his sister. The detective teams up with Lomond, a police doctor, to try to find „The Ringer” who is a mysterious, revenge-driven serial killer and master of disguise. When a lawyer receives a bouquet with a note informing him that he’ll be dead in forty-eight hours, Wembury and his men embark on a frantic quest t...
Best remembered for penning the screenplay for the classic film „King Kong”, author Edgar Wallace was an astoundingly popular luminary in the action-adventure genre in the early twentieth century. „The Ghost of Down Hill” is an entertaining mystery novella, based on the idea that a ghost of a monk haunts a house built on top of former holy ground. This novella has upbeat tone and surprising outcome. „The Queen of Sheba’s Belt” features the disappearance of a priceless belt ...
The second of Edgar Wallace’s two short story collections about Scottish airman Tam during World War I. In this book Tam is joined by a new young American protégé Billy Best. The stories of Tam the pilot are not mysteries. They are the entertaining stories of the exploits of a cockney aviator who supposedly was Charles Lindbergh’s childhood inspiration to fly. Tam is a real person, and all the adventures set forth have actually happened, though names and places are necessar...
„The Fourth Plague” is an intriguing crime novel that was published in 1913, during the early years of Wallace’s career as a novelist. Here again pits a master detective against a powerful crime syndicate, this time with an Italian background. An Italian secret society, burglary, kidnapping, detectives, mysterious artefacts, remarkable coincidences! This is a tale of the Red-Hand, a criminal organization that makes Count Festini, its secret head, the most dangerous man in E...
Written in 1905, it is one of Wallace’s many popular thriller novels. „Four Just Men” was the start of a series about a determined band of European vigilantes who decide to kill off people in the world whom the law cannot punish. Their ingenuity and ability to keep several steps ahead of those who would thwart them, including police, are the essence of the plot. When the British Foreign Secretary Sir Philip Ramon decides to push through a law which will allow the enforced r...
The creek between the canal and the river flows under Lady’s Stairs, a crazy wooden house inhabited by Li Yoseph – known to the police as a smuggler. The neighborhood suspects he is rich, and knows he is mad. Inspector Bradley is out to break a drug-smuggling gang which operates from an old house overhanging the Thames; the gang is headed by a criminal called Mark McGill. The disappearance of young Ron Perryman – whom McGill has murdered and dumped in the river – gives the ...
„The Gambling Girl”, by Edgar Wallace is a book of short story mysteries. Bill and Mary met at a gambling casino and both are imprisoned for reasons that are murky. Bill was a former detective with the American Army at G.H.Q. Mary’s past was more mysterious. From that day forward however, neither of their lives would ever be the same again. Fast-paced, with good twists and turns, an unusual mystery scheme and a little romance. It’s all great fun and Wallace keeps the action...
Forged notes have started to appear everywhere. Mr. Cheyne Wells of Harley Street has been given one. So has Porter. Peter Clifton is rich, but no one is quite certain how he acquired his money – not even his new wife, the beautiful Jane Leith. Jane, newly married to this man she does not love, is plunged into a nightmare of murder and madness. What is the secret of her husband’s immense fortune? Is he „The Clever One” who has baffled the police, the banks and the world wit...
W gliwickim parku zostaje brutalnie zamordowana młoda dziewczyna. Przypomina to lokalnej społeczności o seryjnym mordercy, który zabijał kobiety w Bytomiu, Gliwicach i Zabrzu. Skazany za te zbrodnie Wampir z Szombierek niedługo wyjdzie na wolność. Niezależny dziennikarz Sebastian Strzygoń wraca do sprawy sprzed lat. Pomaga mu antropolożka Anna Serafin. To ona podejmuje się przeprowadzić wywiad z wampirem. Mnożą się pytania, komuś bardzo zależy, by przeszłość pozostała pog...
Edgar Wallace was an English novelist, journalist and playwright, who was an enormously popular writer of detective, suspense stories, and practically invented the modern „thriller”. His popularity at the time was comparable to that of Charles Dickens – one of Wallace’s publishers claimed that a quarter of all books read in England were written by him. „The Flying Fifty-Five” is a novel set in the horse racing community and follows the ups and downs of turf life. It’s all g...
When Inspector Tanner is called in to investigate a ruthless murder at Mark’s Priory, the grand ancestral home of the Lebanon family, he quickly discovers that nothing is quite as it seems. The household is controlled by the family physician, the footmen behave more like guests than servants and the secretary Isla is afraid for her life. Why are these two American „toughs” employed as footmen? Why is Lady Lebanon so unwilling to answer any questions? What he does know is th...
Książka w dwóch wersjach językowych: polskiej i angielskiej. A dual Polish-English language edition. „Znak czterech” (inny tytuł polskiego przekładu: „Znamię czterech”) – powieść kryminalna autorstwa sir Arthura Conana Doyle’a wydana w lutym 1890 roku, druga powieść o przygodach Sherlocka Holmesa. Jest to jedyna powieść o Sherlocku Holmesie niepodzielona na dwie części. Do detektywa amatora Sherlocka Holmesa zgłasza się z prośbą o pomoc panna Mary Morstan (przyszł...
Jack Reacher, który właśnie zawitał do Atlantic City, nadaje się do tej roli idealnie. Na prośbę ambitnej agentki Secret Service przyjmuje to nietypowe zlecenie, nie mając pojęcia, że zagrożenie jest jak najbardziej realne. Prawdziwi zamachowcy są doskonale zorganizowani i gotowi na wszystko. A Reacher stanie na linii ognia.
Contents of the collection: Moonlight at the crossroads Selling Miss Minerva The heart of the loaf Possessions The dollar chasers Idle hands The girl who paid dividends A letter to Australia Nina and the blemish Broadway Brocade. Earl Biggers was a master of stories that highlighted the madness of human nature, both good and bad. The reader wants to see the roots for disadvantages and feel guilty for the villain. These stories are the last epoch when the romantic flourished...
„The Feathered Serpent” is a mystery-thriller novel penned by the remarkably prolific Edgar Wallace. A number of people receive threatening cards emblazoned with the device of a feathered serpent, a device that we later find is associated with ancient Aztec religion and with a cult that still exists in Mexico and Central America. Reporter Peter Dewin suspects the card mysteriously left in the handbag of actress Ella Creed is a publicity stunt. He soon discovers that a wealt...
„The Exploits of Airman Hay” is a series of ten stories about an intrepid aviator by the name of Captain Murray Hay. The stories fast-paced with some surprising twists and turns, well written and great to read. The book presents the stories under the titles found in Edgar Wallace’s manuscript, most of which correspond to those used in Topical Times. Edgar Wallace was a prolific author of crime, adventure and humorous stories, whose best known creations include „The Four Jus...
„The Fellowship of the Frog” is a typical, fast-paced Edgar Wallace thriller. The plot centers around the identity of an arch-criminal who is using down and outs to do his dirty work. The Frog is a menace to Society. A criminal mastermind who has organized the tramps of Britain into an unlawful army. He murders, he robs, he blackmails... He must be stopped. But who is he? There is no shortage of suspects – and no shortage of twists. Richard Gordon, a prosecutor, and Sgt. El...
„The Face in the Night” was written in the year 1924 by Edgar Wallace. Leaving her chicken farm and moving to London to seek her sister, Audrey Bedford is caught passing the Queen of Finland’s stolen necklace, and allows herself to be sent to prison for a year rather than implicate her guilty sibling. Once released, she takes a position as scribe to the mysterious Mr. Malpas, who lurks in his electrically-automated apartment and only allows himself to be seen from across a ...
A collection of crime fiction short stories featuring Mme. Rosika Storey and her resourceful assistant Bella Brickley. Mme. Storey unravels complex cases with thorough investigation and an understanding of human nature. Her way to resolve the mystery is original and bring you in a new world. She is Madame Storey, like Sherlock has fantastic powers of deduction and understanding of psychology, and her secretary is like Watson though she does’t have a degree in medicine. Thes...
Madame Rosika Storey was one of the most celebrated fictional female private investigators during the Golden Age of the mystery (1920-40). She is a beautiful detecative who solves four cases for you in a manner most effecative, arriving at conclusions by processes subliminal, since intuition is her guide in locating the criminal. See what happen in each case, both dangerous and difficult. And since her intuition is so perfectly reliable, and backed up by ingenious proof who...
A historical romance and tale of adventure, set in England during the fourteenth century. Descendent of a noble family, Nigel Loring is the last of his race, and living alone with his aged grand-mother, upon a small remnant of their great estate. In service to King Edward III, Sir Nigel Loring must prove himself worthy of the hand of his the Lady Mary by performing three deeds in her honor. On his way to the altar, Nigel rescues a woman from dishonor, fights a pirate leader...
Author Hulbert Footner (1879-1944) brought the excitement of the 1920s and 1930s to Madame Storey's cosmopolitan adventures, moving away from Edwardian and Victorian flavors of the mystery genre. Beautiful and aloof. Her secretary/narrator/companion is Bella Brickley. Rosika lives near Gramercy Park in NYC and has a pet monkey. She seems to solve cases by use of good guesswork, "practical psychology" and fortuitous prior knowledge of certain facts or people.
‘"When Rogues Fall Out” incorporates some wonderful conundrums to hoodwink and hinder the cleverest of crime readers. This book contains three interconnected stories. In the first, a respectable collector of antiques falls victim to temptation. In the second a police inspector is found dead in suspicious circumstances in a railway tunnel. This section includes an interesting „essay” on the early use of fingerprint evidence. The third is a classic locked room mystery where s...
„Beyond the City” explores the relationships between the residents of three adjoining homes. The cast of characters includes a widowed doctor with two daughters, a retired admiral with a wife and son, and a feminist living with her nephew. Destiny brings these three peculiar households together in the placid English countryside. The desire for money and romance drive these Victorians beyond the natural boundaries of their middle-class lives. As the web of lust and deceit dr...
After a minimal education in Canada, Footner emigrated to New York in 1898 and worked at a variety of jobs, including an unsuccessful stint as an actor. He turned to journalism and worked for a time as a freelancer, contributing articles to periodicals such as Field and Stream. His first works were primarily travelogues of various river trips in Canada and the U.S., although he did produce some adventure novels. He is also credited with introducing the first American female...
Narrated by the character for whom the title is named and set in the late 1600’s, Micah Clarke describes the battle of peasants against the existing king of England in the hopes that they can replace the monarch with his brother who feels he has been unjustly denied the throne. Micah Clarke, a young, innocent peasant joins forces with other peasants, among the Puritans, to fight for this pathetic duke’s cause. It was attempt by Conan Doyle to present the story of the Purita...
„The Under Dogs", published in 1925, is the first novel about Rosika Storey, told by her trusty secretary, Bella Brickley. Beautiful, intelligent Madame Rosika Storey, a respected investigator, becomes interested in the case of a young girl accused of jewel robbery. Although Melanie is desperate, she rejects Mme. Storey’s help, because the gang that is after her is ruthless and, she thinks, unstoppable. When Melanie is kidnapped, Mme. Storey goes undercover herself, and wal...
Love humor writing? Can’t get enough of classic adventure tales? First published in 1902, „The Adventures of Gerard” are the autobiographical reminiscences of an old fictional brigadier soldier who served under Napoleon. He never hesitates to embellish his own bravado, importance, and attractiveness to the ladies, to such an extent that it can’t help but be humorous. Etienne Gerard, a hussar of the French Army, is dashing, flamboyant, and unbelievably full of himself. The b...
As well as penning some of the most popular detective fiction, Conan Doyle also wrote thrilling adventure stories. „Rodney Stone” is a combination of both. Nelson, Beau Brummell, Fox and King George III himself appear in a tale at the heart of which is, as one character says, „a pretty conspiracy – a criminal, an actress and a prize-fighter, all playing their parts”. The book is narrated by Rodney, in 1851 thinking back over the events 1803, when Rodney was 17 and his best ...
„A Duet, with an Occasional Chorus” is a novel by British author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, published in 1899. The novel features the story of a happily married couple which is threatened by a previous lover of the husband. Also, the novel tells the adventures of a young couple, starting from their wedding preparation and ending with the birth of their first child. They are funny and cute, love each other, passionate and want always to be together. They make rules for family l...
Joseph Smith Fletcher (7 February 1863 – 30 January 1935) was a British journalist and author. He wrote more than 230 books on a wide variety of subjects, both fiction and non-fiction. Jackie Farnish has grown up in a grindingly poor household, and as she reaches adulthood she resolves to do whatever is necessary to claw her way out of poverty. She is loved by her childhood playmate Joe Bartle, but takes him for granted and feels that he lacks the spark or ambition to match...
This novel takes place in the London parish of Paddington. The story opens with the murder of an old Jewish pawnbroker. Our Scottish hero, Andrew Lauriston, a penniless aspiring writer, has the misfortune of finding the body, and is accused of killing and robbing the old man. But then it’s found the pawnbroker had had in his possession an extraordinary South African diamond worth over eighty-thousand pounds – a diamond that’s now missing. It falls to Melky Rubenstein to unr...
Viner stumbles upon the body of a murdered man whilst just following through his ordinary day routines. Little does he know that this find would make him a key figure in solving a big mystery. Well its soon discovered that the murdered man’s name was Ashton and some important documents were stolen from him, but the true purpose for killing him and his real identity and that of his charge, make for a rather excitingly interesting murder-mystery... Nevertheless, Mr. Fletcher ...
Richard Austin Freeman, the doyen of the scientific division of detective writing is best known for his character Dr. John Thorndyke. A close and careful investigator and the outstanding medical authority in the field of detective fiction, R. Austin Freeman not only tested the wits of the reader but also inspired many modern detective forensic methods. „Shuttlebury Cobb” is a completely different sort of book. In it Freeman demonstrates his sense of humor and whimsy as he f...
„The Talleyrand Maxim" belongs to the pen of an outstanding British journalist and writer Joseph Smith Fletcher. Linford Pratt is a suave and clever law clerk looking for a chance to better himself. Opportunity knocks when he gets possession of a rich man’s will that would mean the ruin of the present heirs. His thoughts turn to blackmail, since he assumes the wrongful heirs would pay a high price to hang onto their wealth. Pratt’s personal hero is the subtle, wily diplomat...
This novel, first published in 1922, is a good example of J. S. Fletcher’s complex plots. The story starts with a famous actor gone missing in suspicious circumstances in northern England. But other dark deeds soon take our attention. Copplestone, the young dramatist, helping to solve the mystery, found himself suddenly in love; and the solution and his happiness were discovered together. In the search for Oliver, we find ourselves on a wild and lonely coast off the North S...
This is a story of graft and corruption set in one of Fletchers favoured Northern towns. The mayor who is on a clean-up campaign is found dead in his parlour and our hero, his younger cousin, is determined to find out who killed him. Was he eliminated for this reason? There are entanglements involving city officials and his proposed reforms plus jealousy related to relationships. Lots of twists with a surprise murderer. The plot is cleverly centered around the inquest, whic...
Another fast-paced murder mystery by J.S. Fletcher told in the first person. He wrote about 200 books on a wide variety of subjects, both fiction and non-fiction. He was one of the leading writers of detective fiction in the „Golden Age”. It was first published in 1920, and has just the right stock of truly good characters, balanced by a couple of nasties. A young apprentice solicitor in a rural English town bordering Scotland, is riding his bike through lonely stretches of...
Charlie Chan, the first Chinese detective in literature, is modeled after Chang Apana, a real-life police detective in Honolulu. A family originally from Boston, the Winterslips, has some members living in Hawaii. You can almost feel the gentle trade winds of Hawaii during the 1920s in this classic novel by Earl Derr Biggers. One of the wealthy Winterslips living in Hawaii is murdered. A younger member of the family, John Quincy Winterslip, has been sent to Boston to check ...
A quaint and idyllic English community is rocked to its very core when a dead body of a man is found and foul play is suspected. Did he fall or was he pushed? The inquest records a verdict of death by misadventure but more than one person is dubious about the death. But with few clues to go on and no likely suspects, it appears that the brutal crime may remain unsolved. There’s another murder, lots of behind the scenes investigation into burial and marriage records, questio...
Fans of golden-era mysteries will relish the twists and turns of J. S. Fletcher’s „The Chestermarke Instinct”. This cleverly crafted mystery begins with what seems like a common enough occurrence: a bank manager is late for work one morning. But what first appears to be simply a matter of a missed train soon is revealed to be a much more vexing problem. Has the manager, formerly a pillar of honesty, absconded with the missing bank’s items, or has something more sinister occ...
„The Borough Treasurer” (1921) by J.S. Fletcher is a tale of blackmail, murder and a secret quarry. He has quite a large cast of interesting characters in this one, and manages to bring them all to life with great detail. This novel tales place in an obscure small town by the Yorkshire moors – an ideal spot for two ex-cons to start life over. Messrs. Mallalieu and Cotherstone were outsiders who had built a prosperous business in Highmarket and even been elected as Mayor and...
Marshall Allerdyke is driving through the night from London to Hull in response to an urgent telegram from his cousin. As he nears Hull, a beautiful woman stops his car to ask for directions to Scotland. Odd time to be traveling so far and in such a hurry, but Allerdyke’s mind is elsewhere. When he finally arrives in Hull, he finds his cousin dead in his hotel room and a valuable consignment of jewels missing. Allerdyke’s only clue rests with that woman hurrying off to Scot...
When an elderly man’s body is found on the steps of chambers in the Midde Temple, one of the Inns of Court, it falls to newspaperman Frank Spargo and Detective-Sergeant Rathbury to solve the crime. There is no indication as to the idetity of the corpse, whose pockets are completely empty apart from a scrap of paper bearing the names and chambers address of an aspiring young barrister. Who is the victim? Why was he killed? Who is the murderer? These are the questions that Sp...
No sooner had Bob from the Silver Star ranch reached Italy than a telegram arrived asking for $1,000. A pretty woman was behind it, but that wasn’t all. This early work by Earl Derr Biggers was originally published in 1916. „The Ebony Stick” is one of Biggers shorter stories, published after his death. The son of Robert J. and Emma E. (Derr) Biggers, Earl Derr Biggers was born in Warren, Ohio, and graduated from Harvard University in 1907. While on holiday in Hawaii, Bigger...
Ebooki to książki, których treść została zapisana w formie elektronicznej. Są nazywane również e-książkami, publikacjami elektronicznymi czy książkami elektronicznymi. Ebooki można odczytywać na komputerach i laptopach, ale są one przeznaczone głównie do czytania na urządzeniach przenośnych takich jak smartfony, tablety i przede wszystkim czytniki książek elektronicznych. Ebooki posiadające swoje pierwowzory w formie papierowej są jej odwzorowaniem. Posiadają wszystkie elementy obecne w „tradycyjnej” wersji, takie jak okładkę, ilustracje, spis treści, przypisy itp.
Niepodważalną zaletą ebooków jest to, że w odróżnieniu od drukowanej książki można w nich zmieniać rodzaj oraz wielkość czcionki, formatować tekst, a w zależności od posiadanego czytnika istnieje też możliwość wyszukiwania pojedynczych słów w tekście, dodawania zakładek i robienia notatek.
Ebooki są dostępne w wielu formatach. Najpopularniejsze z nich, będące standardem dla publikacji elektronicznych, to EPUB, MOBI i PDF.
To nowoczesny format będący standardem publikacji ebooków. Format EPUB umożliwia zmienianie wielkości fontu, co pomaga dopasować jego rozmiar do ekranu. Ebooki w tym formacie najlepiej odczytywać na urządzeniach posiadających ekran eINK (elektroniczny papier), chociaż można je odczytać także na smartfonie czy tablecie. Format EPUB jest możliwy do odczytania na komputerze, jednak do tego celu konieczne jest zainstalowanie właściwego oprogramowania.
Jest formatem ebooków wykorzystywanym przez czytniki firmy Amazon – Kindle (oraz na innych urządzeniach i programach dostępnych na rynku). Publikacje MOBI są zapisane w formacie Mobipocket, można więc pobrać je na dowolny sprzęt elektroniczny posiadający oprogramowanie umożliwiające odczytanie plików MOBI. Format ten jest oparty na języku HTML, dlatego jego wyświetlanie jest możliwe na urządzeniach mobilnych.
To format zapewniający taki sam wygląd strony jak w wersji papierowej – w tym formacie podział na strony jest sztywny. PDF służy do długoterminowego archiwizowania elektronicznych danych i może być odczytywany na większości komputerów, laptopów, smartfonów, czytników czy tabletów.
Książki sensacyjne są z nami nie od dziś - już w średniowieczu, kiedy królowały romanse rycerskie, wciągające, pełne intryg fabuły były niezwykle popularne. Obecnie ebooki należące do tego gatunku są niezmiennie jednymi z najchętniej czytanych nie tylko w Polsce, ale także na całym świecie. Książki sensacyjne pełne są wartkiej, pełnej zwrotów akcji fabuły oraz częstych wątków kryminalnych. Dodatkowo napisane są przystępnym, często lekkim językiem, który sprawia, że jesteśmy w stanie spędzić długie godziny, podążając za kolejnymi odkryciami i niespodziewanymi wydarzeniami w życiu bohaterów. Choć niektórzy uważają książki sensacyjne za mało ambitną literaturę, której celem jest przede wszystkim dostarczenie emocji i silnych wrażeń, trudno się z tą opinią w pełni zgodzić. Często sięgają one także po political fiction, tworząc nieistniejące w realnym życiu scenariusze oparte na napięciach i rozgrywkach politycznych.
Powieści sensacyjne z najwyższej półki potrafią zaskoczyć czytelnika na każdym kroku, wciągają w tajemnicę oraz wielowątkowe fabuły osadzone w realistycznym świecie pozbawionym wątków fantastycznych. Do takich historii należy chociażby seria powieści autorstwa Camilli Läckberg i Henrika Fexeusa, która składa się z tomów “Mentalista” oraz “Kult”. W pierwszej części policja zostaje wezwana do mocno nietypowego znaleziska - skrzyni ze zwłokami młodej kobiety, która przebita jest mieczami. Brutalne morderstwo czy nieudana magiczna sztuczka? Prowadząca śledztwo inspektor Mina Dabiri prosi o pomoc Vincenta Waldera, mentalistę, który jest ekspertem od mowy ciała oraz świata iluzji. Wspólnie szybko udaje im się odnaleźć wcześniejszą, bardzo podobną sprawę, co prowadzi do wniosku, że mają do czynienia z seryjnym mordercą. Tym bardziej więc muszą się spieszyć, by powstrzymać go, nim pojawią się kolejne ofiary…
Innym przykładem wciągającej serii powieści sensacyjnych jest kultowy już cykl “ Jack Reacher ” Lee Childa - ponad dwadzieścia tomów historii związanych z życiem emerytowanego majora żandarmerii wojskowej Armii Stanów Zjednoczonych, który wychowywał się i uczył całe życie w bazach wojskowych. Służył w 110. Specjalnej Jednostce Dochodzeniowej, gdzie zajmował się szczególnie wymagającymi sprawami żołnierzy Armii Amerykańskiej. Kiedy odszedł z wojska, Reacher rozpoczął życie jako włóczęga, a przez wrodzoną ciekawość często pakował się w różne intrygi, pościgi oraz tajemnice. Jack Reacher mierzy się z kolejnymi wyzwaniami i zagadkami, a także niejednym fałszywym oskarżeniem. Na serię składają się tytuły: "Poziom śmierci", "Umrzeć próbując" (także znane jako "Uprowadzony"), "Wróg bez twarzy", "Podejrzany", "Echo w płomieniach", "Bez pudła", "Siła perswazji", "Nieprzyjaciel", “Jednym strzałem”, "Bez litości", "Elita zabójców", "Nic do stracenia", "Jutro możesz zniknąć", "61 godzin", "Czasami warto umrzeć", "Ostatnia sprawa", "Poszukiwany", “Nigdy nie wracaj”, "Sprawa osobista", "Zmuś mnie", "Sto milionów dolarów", "Adres nieznany" oraz "Nocna runda". Znajdziecie je wszystkie na Woblink - czekają na Was jako książki papierowe, audiobooki lub ebooki (epub, mobi, pdf).
Czasami pojawia się poważny dylemat - czy mamy do czynienia z sensacją, czy z kryminałem? Granice pomiędzy tymi dwoma gatunkami bywają bardzo nieostre, postaramy się jednak pomóc. Obydwa opierają się na niespodziewanych rozwiązaniach fabularnych, jednak kryminał odróżnia od sensacji przede wszystkim fakt, że jego głównym wątkiem niezmiennie pozostaje zbrodnia, której zagadkę próbują z reguły rozwiązać bohaterowie powieści. Kryminały są zatem bardziej oparte na rozważaniach dotyczących sensu życia, wartości czy ludzkich działań niż doświadczeń zmysłowych, które z kolei są głównym elementem wyróżniającym literaturę sensacyjną. Tutaj czytelnik aktywnie zaangażowany jest przede wszystkim w odczuwanie fizycznych doświadczeń, jakich doświadczają zaprezentowani w książce ludzie. Wszystko dzieje się tam dynamicznie, znacznie mniej niż w kryminale jest tu także skupienia na wyglądzie bohaterów czy opisach miejsc, a racjonalnie zbudowana zagadka rozwiązuje się wraz z końcem historii. To oczywiście dzieje się także w kryminałach, tu jednak dość często zakończenie ma gorzki smak - choć zabójca zostaje odnaleziony, nie przynosi to upragnionej satysfakcji i zadośćuczynienia. Tak dzieje się chociażby w klasycznych już kryminałach noir autorstwa Raymonda Chandlera, takich jak “Wysokie okno”, “Głęboki sen” czy “Żegnaj laleczko”, które znajdziecie na Woblink jako ebooki w formatach epub, mobi lub pdf. Do jednych z najbardziej uznanych autorów polskich kryminałów należą z pewnością Katarzyna Bonda (“Urodzony morderca”, “Do cna”, seria “Cztery żywioły Saszy Załuskiej”) oraz Remigiusz Mróz ( seria z Joanną Chyłką, "Widmo Brockenu ", "Langer"), którzy od wielu lat zajmują najwyższe miejsca na listach bestsellerowych powieści. Z kolei kryminały retro, osadzone w przeszłości, tworzy w Polsce chociażby Marek Krajewski - do nich należy jego seria powieści Eberhardzie Mocku, na którą składają się między innymi “Śmierć w Breslau”, “Mock. Golem” czy “Błaganie o śmierć”.
Szukacie czegoś z dreszczykiem, a przy tym dużą dawką humoru? Komedie kryminalne to coś dla Was! Sięgnijcie po książki autorstwa Maryli Szymiczkowej - pod tym pseudonimem kryją się pisarze Jacek Denhel oraz Piotr Tarczyński. Stworzone przez nich powieści to także kryminały retro, które opowiadają o licznych zagadkach kryminalnych, które rozwiązuje fikcyjna krakowska profesorowa Zofia Szczupaczyńska. Wśród dzieł Marii Szymiczkowej znajdują się takie tytuły jak: “Seans w domu egipskim”, “Złoty róg” czy “Rozdarta zasłona” pełne nie tylko tajemnic i intryg, ale także charakterystycznego poczucia humoru i lekkości.
Niewątpliwie ważnymi pozycjami wśród ebooków kryminalnych są te zaliczane do kryminału skandynawskiego. Pełne elementów charakterystycznych dla powieści noir, trudnych tematów oraz nierzadko atmosfery ciężkiej od wzajemnych podejrzeń, niepewności i wrogości kryminały skandynawskie nie od dziś cieszą się ogromną popularnością na całym świecie. Wśród nich warto wskazać na Jo Nesbø i jego seria z Harrym Holem, niepokornym i nieuznającym kompromisów policjantem stosującym niekonwencjonalne metody, dzięki którym ma tyle samo przyjaciół, co wrogów. Jego zmagania znajdziecie w tomach “Człowiek-nietoperz", "Karaluchy", "Czerwone gardło", "Trzeci klucz", "Pentagram", "Wybawiciel", "Pierwszy śnieg", "Pancerne serce", "Upiory", "Policja", "Pragnienie" czy "Nóż". Szukajcie ich wszystkich na Woblink!
Zarówno w thrillerach, jak i kryminałach mamy do czynienia z jakąś zagadką i tajemnicą, napięciem, a także silnymi emocjami. Czym zatem różnią się od siebie te dwa gatunki literackie? W niektórych wypadkach trudno jednoznacznie przyporządkować powieść do któregoś z nich. W kryminale mamy do czynienia ze śledztwem i łamigłówką kryminalną, którą próbuje rozwikłać detektyw lub policjant. W thrillerze także spotkamy się z różnego typu tajemnicami, jednak nad ich rozwiązaniem pracują nie tylko ci funkcjonariusze - tak dzieje się na przykład w thrillerze prawniczym, gdzie głównymi bohaterami są osoby związane ze środowiskiem prawniczym takie jak sędziowie, adwokaci czy prokuratorzy. Należy do nich na przykład bardzo popularny cykl powieści autorstwa Remigiusza Mroza oparty na postaci Joanny Chyłki. Bezwzględna i bezkompromisowa prawniczka staje w szranki z niesprawiedliwością nie tylko na salach sądowych, ale także na miejscach zbrodni. Jej historia zawarta jest w powieściach: “Kasacja”, „Zaginięcie”, „Rewizja”, „Immunitet”, „Inwigilacja”, „Oskarżenie”, „Testament”, „Kontratyp”, „Umorzenie”, „Wyrok”, „Ekstradycja”, „Precedens¨, „Afekt”, „Egzekucja” czy „Skazanie”, wszystkich dostępnych na Woblink. Innym znanym komisarzem, który jest głównym bohaterem powieści Mroza, jest Wiktor Forst, który mierzy się z licznymi zbrodniami przede wszystkim w okolicach Tatr. Znajdziecie je w tomach: „Ekspozycja”, „Przewieszenie”, „Trawers”, „Deniwelacja”, „Zerwa”, „Halny” bądź „Przepaść”.
Obok thrillerów psychologicznych innym chętnie czytanym podtypem tego gatunku jest thriller medyczny. Ich akcja rozgrywa się w środowisku medycznym i często dotyczy zaskakujących zbrodni popełnianych właśnie wśród jego przedstawicieli. Akcja obejmuje często zagrożenia z zakresu biologii medycznej, inżynierii genetycznej lub biotechnologii. Jedną z czołowych przedstawicielek tego nurtu jest Tess Gerritsen. Jej cykl książek o detektyw Jane Rizzoli i doktor Laurze Isles, na podstawie którego powstał serial “Partnerki”, rozpoczyna powieść “Chirurg”. Jej akcja rozgrywa się w Bostonie, po którym grasuje nieznany morderca polujący na samotne młode kobiety, nazywany przez prasę Chirurgiem z racji swoich okrutnych metod. Policja odnajduje trop - podobne zbrodnie miały miejsce dwa lata wcześniej, tyle że sprawca został zastrzelony przez doktor Catherine Cordell, jedyną ofiarę, której udało się przeżyć. Teraz znów czuje się jak w potrzasku - jej jedynym sprzymierzeńcem wydaje się być Thomas Moore, który wraz z Jane Rizzoli prowadzi to śledztwo. Czy jednak uda mu się ocalić Cordell przed genialnym skalpelem mordercy? Dowiedzcie się, sięgając po “Chirurga”, którego znajdziecie na Woblink jako ebook w formacie epub, mobi lub pdf. Innym niezwykle popularnym twórcą thrillerów medycznych jest Robin Cook, uważany za mistrza tego gatunku. Głównymi bohaterami jego bestsellerowego cyklu powieści są patolog Jack Stapleton i jego współpracowniczka Laurie Montgomery. Spotkacie ich w takich tomach jak: “Interwencja”, “Marker”, “Ciało obce” czy “Niebezpieczna gra”.
Amy Engel, B. A. Paris, Fiona Barton, Jenny Blackhurst czy Sharon Bolton - to tylko kilka nazwisk spośród wielu autorów i autorek, którzy tworzą thrillery psychologiczne. Skupiają się one przede wszystkim na motywacjach i przeżyciach bohaterów. Często za punkt wyjścia obierają zwyczajnego, niczym nie wyróżniającego się człowieka, który niespodziewanie zostaje wrzucony w wir zagadkowych, zaskakujących, często mocno niepokojących wydarzeń. F abuły thrillerów psychologicznych do końca trzymają nas w ogromnym napięciu i niepewności. Zaliczyć można do nich “Żmijowisko” Wojciecha Chmielarza kojarzonego bardziej z kryminałami, sięgającego jednak również do bogactwa nurtu thrillerów psychologicznych. Także “Zaginiona dziewczyna” Gillian Flynn, “Jedno po drugim” Ruth Ware, “Złota klatka” Camilli Läckberg czy “Nieznajomy” Harlana Cobena należą do tego podgatunku. Te i wiele innych kryminałów, sensacji oraz thrillerów znajdziecie na Woblink jako książki papierowe, audiobooki lub ebooki (epub, mobi, pdf) - dajcie się porwać pełnym napięcia i emocji historiom!