„The Little Gentleman from Okehampstead” is a collection of connected stories about Mendel Honeywood, a diminutive insurance agent who skips out on his family and his hometown of Okehampstead, Massachusetts, and arrives in England, without a cent, to enter into a life of „crime”. He meets up with James Van Clarence Smith, disinherited scion of the wealthy American millionaires, and Lady Felicia Lakenham, upper-class, with a very small income. These three engage in somewhat ...
A best-selling author of novels, short stories, magazine articles, translations, and plays, Oppenheim published over 150 books. He is considered one of the originators of the thriller genre, his novels also range from spy thrillers to romance, but all have an undertone of intrigue. He was the earliest writer of spy fiction as understood today, and invented the „Rogue Male” school of adventure thrillers that was later exploited by John Buchan and Geoffrey Household. This 192...
This is another great novel by Edward Phillips Oppenheim, the prolific English novelist who was in his lifetime a major and successful writer of genre fiction including thrillers and spy novels, and who wrote over a 100 of them. When David Granet asks for a place to stay „within a twenty-mile radius of either Nice or Cannes”, he does not anticipate the trouble that he finds at the Manoir of Lady Grassleyes. The Lady of the manor is dead when he arrives, and the will is disp...
Originally published in 1913, „The Great Impersonation” is probably the most famous spy novel of all time. This tale is full of murder, crime, confused identity, blackmail, war, romance, politics, and there’s even a ghost... In 1913, a German spy assumes a dead Englishman’s identity and infiltrates British society as a sleeper agent, but when he falls in love with the Englishman’s wife and his Hungarian ex-lover recognizes him, he must decide how to deal with the two women ...
John Strangeways lives the life of a country Gentleman farmer with his puritan brother in the hills of Cumberland. Far from the world of cities and noise he lived the clean, healthy, out-of-door life. When actress Louise Maurel’s car breaks down near their farm, she is forced to seek refuge with the misogynist brothers. Love ensues. Life no longer was quite the same to him, and in a short time he followed her to London. The coming of an unsophisticated though well educated,...
Edward Phillips Oppenheim (1866-1946) was the earliest writer of spy fiction as understood today, inventing the „rogue male” school of adventure thrillers and writing over 150 novels of all sorts. In „The Golden Beast”, a woman curses her lover’s father, a baron, who had her gamekeeper father hanged. Years afterward, three of the baron’s descendants disappear in a manner that baffles Scotland Yard, appearing they were the victims of that ancient curse. Written in 1925, with...
The six stories in Part I of this book trace the early career of Peter Benskin. He is a public school graduate with a small private income who joins the police force in London. After an early success he transfers to Scotland Yard where he becomes a detective. He is successful in solving several difficult cases but is hampered at times by his ethical feelings towards criminals who have been coerced or forced to commit crimes. He allows the „innocent” to escape, while he purs...
An engrossing tale of financial intrigue, full of shadowy characters and shady dealings from the author of mystery and espionage thrillers E. Phillips Oppenheim. Phineas Duge, leader of a group of American millionaires who work financial deals together, suspects his colleagues of crooked dealings, and tricks them into signing a document that gives him power over the group. During a struggle the document is stolen from Duge, and everyone is pulled into a frantic search to re...
Stirling Deane has sold the Little Anna Gold Mine which he discovered in South Africa early in his career. The sale has made him a rich man and the head of the company to which he sold the mine. His is engaged to Lady Olive Nunnelly, and is the envy of all of society. Deane is threatened with ruin when a old enemy – Richard Sinclair- shows up in London with what appears to be a legitimate prior deed to the mine. After a meeting with Deane, the man is found murdered and the ...
This mystery that takes place in 1947 in Nice about conflicting political goals between an American and a Chinese. Shortly thereafter, the granting of independence to the Philippine Islands by the United States, Japan attempts to seize them by force. When the Japanese attempt to invade the newly freed islands, their entire fleet is destroyed by a single battleship of the United States Navy using a weapon that concentrates and amplifies electric currents in the earth’s atmos...
This is a very clever collection of linked stories by E. Phillips Oppenheim written in 1913. Algernon Knox, pretty young, dapper, seemingly silly, has failed at everything. Although wealthy, he fails when he stands for parliament. By chance he becomes involved in a blackmail against his uncle, who is a diplomat. Knox foils the plot, and a new career is born, the gentleman detective. In some ways, the young man carries out increasingly dangerous and cleaver missions against ...
Welcome to 1922 and E. P. Oppenheim’s „The Evil Shepherd”. A businessman is found stabbed through the heart, the obvious suspect his partner: Oliver Hilditch, a cold-eyed fellow with a paper-thin alibi. Francis Ledsam is a defense barrister and is congratulating himself on a brilliant performance which has just seen Oliver Hilditch acquitted of murder. His ego is pricked by Margaret Hilditch confessing to him that Hilditch was guilty of crimes far more monstrous than murder...
Na weselu dochodzi do morderstwa. Kto spośród zaproszonych gości miał motyw? Dlaczego nikt nie przyznaje się do znajomości ze zmarłym? Czy dojdzie do skandalu?Do akcji wkracza znana z dwóch poprzednich części cyklu wdowa po aptekarzu ze Skały, Karolina Morawiecka. To miejscowa panna Marple, której pomagają zakonnica, pies oraz znajomość literatury i sztuki kulinarnej.Czy wdowie po aptekarzu uda się rozwikłać kolejną kryminalną zagadkę? Pytania się mnożą, weselna muzyka gra, a...
Porywający thriller kryminalny autorki światowych bestsellerów. Z udziałem Willa Trenta i Sary LintonRutynę rodzinnych zakupów przerywa uprowadzenie Michelle Spivey, matki opuszczającej sklep z jedenastoletnią córką. Śledztwo trwa, policja szuka porwanej, a partner błaga o jej uwolnienie. Bez powodzenia. Jakby Michelle rozpłynęła się w powietrzu. Miesiąc później, w senne niedzielne popołudnie lekarka sądowa Sara Linton jest na lunchu ze swoim chłopakiem, Willem Tre...
Julian Orden, son of a British aristocrat attends a dinner party and meets Catherine, a young woman of mixed antecedents – British and Russian. She is entrusted with important documents. When she is suspected of being a spy and arrested, she saves herself by giving the papers into the keeping of young Orden. A beautiful, intelligent young woman – is she a traitorous spy or a patriot? These two characters become caught up in a plan by the leaders of the working people of Ger...
The adventures of Mr. Stanely Brooke, „The Deliberate Detective”. E. Phillips Oppenheim’s detective Stanley Brooke unearths the strange and criminous underbelly of London, but the greatest challenge he tackles is how to capture the heart of his beautiful but grim partner, Constance. This detective contributed to the foundation of the genre’s history. The collection also includes the following stories: „The Rescue of Warren Tyrrwell”, „The Princess Pays”, „The Other Side of ...
„The Double Traitor” is an espionage novel set in the days leading to the first World War. The main character is Francis Norgate, an aspiring British diplomat who falls in disfavor with his superiors for defending a woman while stationed in Berlin. The resulting scandal causes Norgate to be recalled. On the way home, he meets a German gentleman, Selingman, who claims to be a crockery salesman. But, Selingman is not what he appears to be. Disillusioned by the English governm...
Lord Evelyn and a group of seven like-minded esthetes make up „The Ghosts” a cabal of social arbiters, of whom the mere mention is regarded as a faux pas. They are imbued with almost mystical power in setting tastes and trends and behavior for the members of Society in London in 1908. Desperate for stimulation „The Ghosts” embark on a risky program of wealth redistribution... other peoples wealth. Meanwhile, a spurned aspirant to their club, the American debutante Sophy Van...
E. Phillips Oppenheim, writing as Anthony Partridge, in 1912. A curious tale in three parts. „The Court of St. Simon”, by E. Phillips Oppenheim tells the story of Monsieur Simon with his consort Josephine, who lives in the demi-monde of Paris, consorts with criminals and artists, and exacts „contributions” from various evil-doers in the „Court of St. Simon” an underground tribunal of, for, and by, the criminal class. One evening, he brings along with the jaded youth Eugene ...
Edward Phillips Oppenheim (1866-1946) was an English novelist, in his lifetime a major and successful writer of genre fiction. This novel is an Oppenheim classic from 1919 about a high society villain: characteristic of Oppenheim’s typical works, with the characters living in luxury, and a very flowing and exact story. Much of Oppenheim’s work possesses a unique escapist charm, featuring protagonists who delight in Epicurean meals, surroundings of intense luxury, and the re...
Alfred Burton, a smooth-talking salesman, is having a perfectly ordinary day on the job when he stumbles across a strange plant with green leaves and a cluster of queer little brown beans hanging down from them in an old house. The virtue of the beans is that he who eats one shall see nothing, think nothing, say nothing but the truth. Alfred Burton has a well-meaning, rather ordinary wife who becomes unendurable to him, and he falls in love with a charming girl who would ha...
Wrapped in furs until only my nose and eyes were visible, I was walking along the Nevski Prospekt in St. Petersburg one winter’s evening, and almost involuntarily turned into the Dominique, that fashionable restaurant which, garish in its blaze of electricity, is situated in the most frequented part of the long, broad thoroughfare. It was the dining-hour, and the place, heated by high, grotesquely-ornamented stoves, was filled with officers, ladies, and cigarette smoke, whi...
This is a very early novel by E. Phillips Oppenheim from 1897. The wealthy and bored Lord Hildyard, Marquis of Esholt, is on a yachting tour with a group of friends, including his kept lover, Pauline Owston. When Hildyard spies an apparently uninhabited island, he slips off the ship in search of adventure. In the middle of the night, he hears wonderful violin music and finds a young and beautiful girl, Bertha, playing in the forest. She is accompanied by a cruel and misshap...
„The Box with Broken Seals” is a thrilling cat and mouse murder mystery following the narrative of Jocelyn Thew and the English Service. This skillfully written and an exciting espionage story of intrigue, unfolding in the Oppenheim’s best style. The reader will follow with avidity the daring moves of Thew from the time he sails from New York on the „City of Boston,” accompanied by a dying man and a special nurse in the person of Katharine Beverley, a society girl who is un...
Phillip Romilly is a poor art teacher in London, half-starved, both mentally and physically. His cousin, Douglas, has everything and even buys Beatrice, Philip’s fiancée. He strangles Douglas, throws him in the canal, and assumes his identity. Douglas had booked passage to America for the next day, so after a pleasant sea voyage Phillip arrives at the Waldorf Hotel in New York as Douglas Romilly. Philip’s career in New York is filled with incident. On his wedding day, he is...
„The Black Box” is a series of loosely connected short stories detailing the adventures of Sanford Quest, world’s greatest criminologist. The story starts off in New York City, travels to England, Egypt, and around the world to San Francisco, then into the wild west of New Mexico. There are two main plot lines which merge into one along with romance mixed in with the ever present danger. Melodramatic, episodic, supernatural. It’s all great fun and Oppenheim keeps the action...
This late novel of E. Phillips Oppenheim begins as the „Train Bleu” pulls into the railroad station in Monaco. It’s a leisurely spy fiction tale set in Monaco as various members of aristocracy from different countries plus one vacationing American woman find themselves involved with international intrigue. The bulk of the book consists of members of the leisure class drinking cocktails, playing baccarat, and generally spending time in Monaco’s elite clubs. Oppenheim’s work ...
The story of a young man, Lord Sandbrook, who takes revenge against the directors of a company he holds responsible for the deaths of his father and mother. The battlefield is Basinghall Street, where the offices of Woolito, Limited, are situated. A textile business is the center of strange machinations – suicides, failures, conflagrations, disaster to various directors, finally a raid on the stock, and the president is a ruined man. In this story Mr. Oppenheim takes a vaca...
Guy Ducaine is a recent graduate of Oxford University. Through a series of unfortunate events he is penniless and starving in the rural town of Brasters. Seeking to make a few shillings, he schedules a lecture on local history. On the same time, Lord Rowchester invites the officer and explorer Colonel Mostyn Ray to the village to speak. Ducaine’s lecture fails and he returns to his small house and collapses from hunger. Found there by Ray, and Rowchesters lovely daughter, L...
Welcome to the adventuring, thrilling world of E. Phillips Oppenheim’s modern retelling of „Monte Cristo”. Gilbert Channay is released from prison after three years. He had been framed-up by business partners in the Channay Syndicate, and sets about executing his revenge. The retired policeman, Martin Fogg, mysteriously appears, knowing too much about Channay’s business. He helps Channay escape an attempt on his life, and keeps turning up at crucial times. The plot is the s...
Mr. Hamer Wildburn, a young American, graduate of Harvard is wintering on the Mediterranean coast of France in his newly purchased yacht „The Bird of Paradise”, and is puzzled by the desire he finds in visitors coming aboard at different times to buy the vessel from him. One night he is awoken at 3 am by the cries of a beautiful, and wearing priceless emeralds, woman swimming alongside. She comes aboard and offers to buy the yacht for twice what he paid. The next day, the f...
Joseph P. Cray is an American manufacturer who has just completed a year serving coffee to the troops in France during World War 1. He is motivated by good will, and also to escape his American second wife who is the head of a temperance organization. With sybaritic glee, he returns to London, dons civilian garb, and enjoys his first cocktail. He is soon joined by his daughter, the beautiful Lady Sara Sittingbourne, who lives in London. Together the two seek „adventure” in ...
A young adventurer steals two complimentary idols of Buddha from a Chinese temple, one of which is supposed to have a debasing and malevolent effect upon its owners. One of the idols represents the Body, and all of the corruption and evil of Mankind, the other represents the Soul, and all that is good. The Ballastons are a spendthrift aristocratic family threatened with the loss of their ancestral home due to large debts. The son steals these idols, ends up with just the na...
Yet another collection of linked short stories from Oppenheim. By chance a young man and woman meet and set up an agency to aid Scotland Yard, but is romance in the air? This story deals with a young man and a young woman who make an informal partnership in criminal investigation. This whodunit murder mysteries collection brings to you some of Oppenheim’s finest murder mysteries to keep you at your toes: „The Evil Shepherd Murder at Monte Carlo”, or „Wolves Amongst the Hone...
E. Phillips Oppenheim wrote most famously of secret agents and duplicitous diplomats, secret treaties and international conspiracies, moonlit Riviera casinos, Swiss hotel suites, perilous yacht trips, and glamorous trans-European express trains. Known in his time as „the Prince of Storytellers,” Oppenheim, like the brand names of today’s best seller lists, offered readers in the first half of the 20th century a steady, predictable, and entertaining supply of pop fiction. „T...
Scotland Yard unearths the mysterious disappearance of a wealthy, eccentric banker, the reason for a dead man in his bank, and the vanishing of the bank’s funds. The background shifts from the bank to the club, and the missing millionaire’s known habits give necessary leads to the unscrambling of the mystery. Oppenheim continues to hold up his end. An enjoyable read! E. Phillips Oppenheim was a British author who wrote nearly 150 novels during his career. He styled himself ...
This is another collection of interlinked short stories about the good life in Monte Carlo and Beausoleil after the first World War. Ten stories about Peter Hames, the former Inspector on the New York police department that got tossed off the force when he tried to stop an innocent man being railroaded by a corrupt police force. Disillusioned, but after inheriting a million dollars, he moves to France to become a painter. But the detective instincts never left and he gets i...
He might be almost forgotten now, but Mr. Oppenheim wrote an amazing 116 novels, including many bestsellers. Several are set amid the glamour of Monte Carlo, including this 1920s romantic thriller. The novel has an intriguing start, as handsome and charming Sir Hargrave Wendever gets a nasty shock from the doctor. Wealthy, handsome, intelligent, single, with the world at his feet – suddenly he finds his world crumbling. What will he do? He decides to do some good with his m...
The illicit gambling house in the Place Noire was raided by the police in Paris. Several of the gang were killed, one was caught and jailed, and one escaped by shambling off in the guise of a workman, accompanied by a young girl, a dwarf, and a monkey. Gilbert Hannaway, who was wounded as a bystander on the night of the raid, has been searching for the girl for five years but, one evening, he finds her. Lord Ellingham is a peer of the realm, with a successful marriage, and ...
Edward Phillips Oppenheim (1866 1946), an English novelist, was a major and successful writer of genre fiction, particularly thrillers. Among his books are „The Betrayal”, „The Avenger”, „The Double Life of Mr. Alfred Burton”, „The Devil’s Paw”, and „The Evil Shepherd”. Many of Oppenheim’s works appeared as newspaper or magazine serials before they were published in book form. The serial versions of his novels were often syndicated for publication in periodicals in the USA ...
This is a connected collection of short stories about the leader of a secret society pledged to protect England and their German adversary. In „The Double Four”, Peter is called out of retirement by that organization, which, since his departure, has morphed into a sort of private diplomatic secret service. Peter acquires a title, some nice clothes, and a new archenemy, a German spy, Bernadine. Light hearted with a bit of romance along with the action and fancy pants English...
Another great spy novel from the british author E. Phillips Oppenheim who achieved worldwide fame with his thrilling novels and short stories concerning international espionage and intrigue. This one is a connected collection of short stories about the leader of a secret society pledged to protect England and their German adversary. This novel is an Oppenheim classic from 1919 about a high society villain: characteristic of Oppenheim’s typical works, with the characters liv...
With the police hot on his tail, Peter Ruff decides to turn from a life of crime to the more lucrative life of a private investigator. With his ties to the underworld and his skill at disguise, Peter is the perfect sleuth. Along with his trusted and beautiful assistant, Violet Brown, Mr. Ruff is brilliantly successful in his new career. As his reputation for solving crime grows, he is noticed and adopted as a leader by a large conglomerate of criminals who have chosen to tu...
Edward Phillips Oppenheim is considered one of the originators of the thriller genre, his novels also range from spy thrillers to romance, but all have an undertone of intrigue. This novel is one of E. Phillips Oppenheim’s best works and opens with a fantastic description of the boring life of Mr. Peter Cradd, leather merchant, husband, father, slave to his family, stoic self denier, and all-around put upon man in the bowler hat. He is barely able to pay his bills, has a wi...
A solitary cabin stood far away in the backwoods of Canada, outside all tracks of civilization, in a region which only the native Indians and a few daring trappers cared to penetrate. Rudely built of pine logs, it was ill-calculated to withstand the piercing cold and frost which, for nine months out of the twelve, holds this region in an iron grip. Around it, a small clearing had been effected, but the ground was many feet thick in snow, which, save where in front of the do...
Havoc occurs when European countries are discussing covert alliances. The story revolves around the creation of a secret alliance between Germany, Russia, and Austria. The English hope to split Russia away by holding the Czar to his previous public commitments, but they need proof of what was done to create the pressure. All the pressures that lead to WWI are there, but the intrigues and secret treaties create an interesting background to the twists and turns of the plot....
In an interesting precursor to the later „I Spy” television series, the novel follows the activities of a young British tennis professional, Mervyn Amory, who is spending the season in Monte Carlo. While traveling from Paris on Le Train Bleu, he meets an Italian secret agent who is carrying documents which show the treachery of the dictator Matorni. Matorni is a thinly disguised Mussolini. (The title of the novel bears no relation to the book). Interestingly, this novel was...
It is strange to find Mr. Phillips Oppenheim choosing as his hero an earnest politician with a love for social reform. „Nobody’s Man” starts out as a standard whodunit murder mystery then makes an abrupt lane-change into British politics of the mid-1920’s. Brigadier general Andrew Tallente, late of Parliament, is implicated in the death of his male secretary, the son of a classmate at Eton. Seems the younger man may have not only been having an affair with the hero’s Americ...
E. Phillips Oppenheim was a popular 20th century writer best known for penning suspenseful thriller novels like „The Mystery of Mr. Bernard Brown”. Many of his more than 100 novels are still read today. His novels and short stories have all the elements of blood-racing adventure and intrigue and are precursors of modern-day spy fictions. „Nicholas Goade, Detective” is a collection of short mysteries about a Scotland Yard detective on holiday. As he travels across England wi...
„Mr. Mirakel” is the last novel written by E. Phillips Oppenheim in 1943. Marquis Roderigo de Cordovina is leaving his Portuguese estates in Lisbon because he is being pressured to join the German military and command a mechanical battalion. He meets Miss Anne Strangeways in the seaplane terminal. The two board an airboat for London. Shortly thereafter, they meet again at the home of Princess Rosina Di Gomez who is the niece of the Portuguese Ambassador. At this point the p...
The man was awaiting the service of his dinner in the magnificent buffet of the Gare de Lyon. He sat at a table laid for three, on the right-hand side of the entrance and close to the window. From below came the turmoil of the trains. In appearance he was of somewhat less than medium height, of unathletic, almost frail, physique. His head was thrust a little forward, as though he were afflicted with a chronic stoop. He wore steel-rimmed spectacles with the air of one who ha...
Jacob’s Ladder begins: Seated at breakfast on that memorable July morning, Jacob Pratt presented all the appearance of a disconsolate man. His little country sitting-room was as neat and tidy as the capable hands of the inimitable Mrs. Harris could make it. His coffee was hot and his eggs were perfectly boiled. Through the open windows stretched a little vista of the many rows of standard roses which had been the joy of his life. Yet blank misery dwelt in the soul of this e...
Harvey Garrard, as his limousine crawled over London Bridge and turned into the dingy streets beyond, leaned forward in his seat looking out of the window with the half-weary anticipation of one who revisits familiar but distasteful scenes. There was a faint air of disgust in his expression as the well-known odours of the neighbourhood assailed his nostrils. Forty-eight hours ago he had been living in a paradise of mimosa and roses warmed by Riviera sunshine, his senses rea...
The clamour of crushing boughs and howling wind sank every now and then into insignificance before the roaring of deep-throated guns, whose red fire flashed out across what seemed to be a bottomless abyss. Below, the army of the Turks decimated in numbers, yet still a host, within the walls of Crersa, the defenders of an oppressed and brave country making their last stand in their ancient stronghold.
This is another adventure Oppenheim thriller written in 1899. When Phillip Morton is eight years old, his father is pushed off the edge of a slate quarry. A servant from the local castle is suspected. Ten years later, by chance, Phillip meets the lord of the local castle, the scholar and adventurer Ravenor. On a whim, Ravenor offers to pay for Phillip’s further education if Phillip will befriend his wayward nephew. Phillip meets Mr. Marx, Lord Ravenor’s secretary, and is bo...
Though dated stylistically, this novel has the makings of a decent movie thriller. The story takes place between the Anschluss, the Nazi takeover of Austria, March 1938, and the invasion of Poland in September 1939. A wealthy Jewish banker, philanthropist, and art collector is forced to flee Vienna to avoid imprisonment by the Nazi’s. He disappears on the night the Germans march into Austria, and his fortune and collection vanishes with him, leaving behind his personal secr...
This novel was written in 1926, almost ten years after the Russian revolution. The nature and tragedy of the Soviet revolution and the new regime are clearly described in this novel. The ruthless and deadly power of Soviet communism tries to extend its reach to the Trade Unions of the postwar United Kingdom. The activities of various secret agents, civilian, commercial, military and cultural are described in this book.
’Michael’s Evil Deeds’ (and they are very evil at times) is a rather ingenious crime novel in more ways than one. Firstly the 11 chapters each represent a separate incident but overall they do link together, if on occasions somewhat loosely. And secondly the tale is told by various of the protagonists so there is often a different point of view within each chapter.
The two men hesitated upon the tee, gazing down the glade towards the distant-green. Their caddies were still pointing in excitement to a motionless object stretched upon the smooth turf close to the flag. „Look there! „ „It’s a man! „ „He is dead! „ The players paused to consider the situation. They were oddly contrasted combatants–one, Mr. Edgar Franks, elderly, large and florid, with a mass of flaxen hair only slightly streaked with grey, a transatlantic millionaire, and...
When Lord Wolfenden saw, in the supper-room of the Milan Restaurant, a beautiful woman and became acquainted with her by saving the life of her elderly companion, the mysterious Mr. Sabin, as they leave the restaurant, he little knew the web of intrigue into which he was entering. Twists and turns galore, enjoyable descriptions about the upper-crust and by-gone days. Mr. Oppenheim can be depended upon to give his plots that turn which is as admirable as it is unexpected, an...
This connected series of stories chronicle the adventures of a young American graduate of Harvard college, M. Edmund Martin and the retired British soldier, Colonel Green on the Cote d’Azur in the period just to World War 1. The two meet at a casino, and manage to avoid many of the classic traps which await the idle wealthy of the time. Seemingly inadvertently, they foil crooks, rescue maidens, recover stolen jewels, help young lovers, assist spies against Germany, and foil...
At half-past eleven o’clock–Mr. Billingham was a man of regular habits–he quitted the promenade, crossed the Place in front of the Casino, and selected a table outside the Café de Paris. He selected it simply because it happened to be the nearest empty one and without even a glance at his neighbours. It was nevertheless, without a doubt, by the direction of that mysterious influence called fate that he should have chosen that particular chair and ordered his champagne cockt...
Victorian Socialist Romance. Enoch Strone is a book-loving rustic loner who lives in a remote hand-built cabin. He works as a mechanical engineer in the industrial town of Gascester. One evening he meets a poor factory girl, Milly, who has been abandoned by her friends during a walk in the woods. On the same day he is accosted by the Reverand Martinghoe who introduces Strone to his beautiful, widowed, wealthy sister Lady Malingcourt. Strone is bewitched by her lovely singin...
One of many great works by E. Phillips Oppenheim, who styled himself as the „prince of storytellers,” and is credited with creating the ‘rogue male’ genre of adventure thrillers and was one of the earliest writers of spy fiction from the late 19th and early 20th Century England. The hero in this one is Roger Sloane, a well-off American bon vivant who decides to blow the whistle on a gang of transplanted American gangsters who have abandoned New York and set up a sophisticat...
Mr. Samuel T. Billingham of New York, recently landed from the great liner anchored a few miles out, walked along the Terrace at Monte Carlo, serene, light-hearted, beatifically content. His yellow shoes and his variegated socks might be described as a trifle vivid, but the rest of his attire–his well-pressed grey suit, his irreproachable linen, and his well- shaped grey Homburg hat– was beyond criticism. He was a man of medium height, thick-set, inclined a little, perhaps,...
The Princess opened her eyes at the sound of her maid’s approach. She turned her head impatiently toward the door. „Annette,” she said coldly, „did you misunderstand me? Did I not say that I was on no account to be disturbed this afternoon? „ Annette was the picture of despair. Eyebrows and hands betrayed alike both her agitation of mind and her nationality.
A novel written in 1912. These are good Victorian or Edward tales about representatives of the English upper class who are engaged in uncovering crimes, espionage, good deeds and shrouded by secrets. Some of these stories Oppenheim continued to develop in full novels. Others are short master classes with sketches, character and description. Unlike many of his stories, the ending for a couple of them is more acute or sad than usual.
General, his companion pronounced, „you are getting fat. Too many cocktails.” General Besserley, late of the Secret Service at Washington and now a very popular member of Monaco society, glanced downwards at his slightly increasing outline. He was rather a fine figure of a man and his carriage was beyond reproach, but it was certainly true that there was sometimes a little difficulty about the two bottom buttons of his waistcoat.
We all got up from tea in the hall, made our way to the drawing-room, and thence into the morning-room, which opened out of it. There was plenty of daylight still. James came in after us, and went straight up to a framed panel portrait which stood with others on a small table in a remote corner. It showed a tall handsome, clean-shaved man of three or four and thirty, of fine physique, seated astride a chair, his arms folded across the back of the chair as he faced the camer...
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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!