British Mystery Multipack Volume 8

Mystery & Suspense, Traditional British, Fiction & Literature, Anthologies, Cozy Mysteries
Cover of the book British Mystery Multipack Volume 8 by Israel Zangwill, Edgar Wallace, G. K. Chesterton, Enhanced E-Books
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Author: Israel Zangwill, Edgar Wallace, G. K. Chesterton ISBN: 1230000529440
Publisher: Enhanced E-Books Publication: July 3, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Israel Zangwill, Edgar Wallace, G. K. Chesterton
ISBN: 1230000529440
Publisher: Enhanced E-Books
Publication: July 3, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English

The original whodunits were the locked room mysteries, a sub-genre of the detective mystery in which a crime is committed—almost always murder— in a location that no intruder could have entered or left, e.g., a locked room. There have been many ingenious twists on the motif since it first flourished in the late 1890s and early 1900s, as can be seen in the classic collection that makes up British Mystery Multipacks Volume 8 – Locked Room Mysteries:

The Big Bow Mystery (1892) by Israel Zangwill

Regarded as the first full-length locked room mystery, the novel focuses on a murder that has occurred inside a locked room, with no clear indication as to the weapon used, the perpetrator of the horrendous crime, or a possible escape route. 

The Four Just Men (1905) by Edgar Wallace

The dead body of a politician  is discovered in a room, locked from within and protected from without. The room is empty of all but the murdered man and even upon finding the corpse, it cannot be determined what the man died of.

The Invisible Man and The Wrong Shape (1911) by G. K. Chesterton 

From Chesterton’s first Father Brown collection, The Innocence of Father Brown, comes two whodunits best described as locked-room detective cozy mysteries!

The Valley of Fear (1914) by Arthur Conan Doyle

The fourth and final Sherlock Holmes mystery is one of Doyle’s finest. A man is shot with a sawed-off shotgun and disfigured beyond recognition in an impregnable castle, to which the only entrance is sealed. There is a trail of bewildering clues—raincoats, dumbbells, a missing wedding ring—and a gripping backstory of a cult that terrorized a valley in the American West.  

The Doomdorf Mystery (1918) by Melville Davisson Post

Guest American author Melville Post's best-known character is the mystery-solving, justice dispensing West Virginian backwoodsman, Uncle Abner. The 22 Uncle Abner tales, written between 1911 and 1928, have been called some of "the finest mysteries ever written." The Doomdorf Mystery is one of the best.

Includes author image gallery.

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The original whodunits were the locked room mysteries, a sub-genre of the detective mystery in which a crime is committed—almost always murder— in a location that no intruder could have entered or left, e.g., a locked room. There have been many ingenious twists on the motif since it first flourished in the late 1890s and early 1900s, as can be seen in the classic collection that makes up British Mystery Multipacks Volume 8 – Locked Room Mysteries:

The Big Bow Mystery (1892) by Israel Zangwill

Regarded as the first full-length locked room mystery, the novel focuses on a murder that has occurred inside a locked room, with no clear indication as to the weapon used, the perpetrator of the horrendous crime, or a possible escape route. 

The Four Just Men (1905) by Edgar Wallace

The dead body of a politician  is discovered in a room, locked from within and protected from without. The room is empty of all but the murdered man and even upon finding the corpse, it cannot be determined what the man died of.

The Invisible Man and The Wrong Shape (1911) by G. K. Chesterton 

From Chesterton’s first Father Brown collection, The Innocence of Father Brown, comes two whodunits best described as locked-room detective cozy mysteries!

The Valley of Fear (1914) by Arthur Conan Doyle

The fourth and final Sherlock Holmes mystery is one of Doyle’s finest. A man is shot with a sawed-off shotgun and disfigured beyond recognition in an impregnable castle, to which the only entrance is sealed. There is a trail of bewildering clues—raincoats, dumbbells, a missing wedding ring—and a gripping backstory of a cult that terrorized a valley in the American West.  

The Doomdorf Mystery (1918) by Melville Davisson Post

Guest American author Melville Post's best-known character is the mystery-solving, justice dispensing West Virginian backwoodsman, Uncle Abner. The 22 Uncle Abner tales, written between 1911 and 1928, have been called some of "the finest mysteries ever written." The Doomdorf Mystery is one of the best.

Includes author image gallery.

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