Unsolved by Bruce Graeme
Miss Marple: "4.50 from Paddington"
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Unsolved by Bruce Graeme
Miss Marple: "4.50 from Paddington"
yesterdaysgallery
1935 Lippincott hardcover
“First Edition. Mystery novel of mobster who brings his gangster methods from America home to England.”
Seattle Mystery Bookshop
Epilogue. Bruce Graeme. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Company, 1934. First edition. Original dust jacket by Yangman Carcen.
Creative alternative ending to Dickens’ unfinished “The Mystery of Edwin Drood.” Another attempt to solve the Edwin Drood mystery, this time through the medium of a Scotland Yard detective and a dream solution.
Le Gibet
Collection created in 1955 at Editions Robert Laffont, and continued [# 11 to #18] at Editions Gérard (Marabout) in Verviers (who already printed the series since the beginning]. This series - ahead of its time and on the taste of the public - was entirely devoted to historical detective novels. Among the themes discussed: The Courrier de Lyon affair, the Revolution of 1848, Néron, Fouché, Cortez ... In spite of remarkable texts, the collection did not exceed the 18 titles. [1955-1957]. The authors were french (except Bruce Graeme).
Fine unknown cover art, often recto verso. Reproduced here, 9 of the 10 issues at Robert Laffont, including the verso of # 1. The series at Editions Gerard will have a different presentation.
publisher:Robert Laffont, Paris
source:amsaklapper’s collection
The Eye & the Ear (Franciszka Themerson & Stefan Themerson, 1945).
The Undetective
My thoughts on The Undetective by #BruceGraeme reissued by @Moonstone_Press #CrimeFiction #BookReview
A review of The Undetective by Bruce Graeme – 231102 I have come across the works of Bruce Graeme, a pseudonym of Graham Montague Jeffries, through following his series of bibliomysteries featuring bookshop owner, Theodore Terhune, which Moonstone Press had reissued. The Undetective, originally published in 1962, again has books and the book industry at its heart, but is a standalone novel which…
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A Case Of Books
Bruce Graeme is on top form with A Case of Books, a bibliomystery with an international twist, reissued by @moonstone_press #CrimeFiction #amreading #bookreview
A review of A Case of Books by Bruce Graeme – 230504 Bruce Graeme’s books, I have found, can be sometimes a bit of a hit or miss affair, but this, the sixth in his Theodore Terhune series, originally published in 1946 and reissued by Moonstone Press, is one of his more accessible and intriguing. It is a bibliomystery and Graeme’s reluctant amateur sleuth, bookseller Terhune, finds himself drawn…
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Ten Trails To Tyburn
Theodore Terhune solves the mystery of a dead tramp thanks to a series of short stories in this inventive piece of #CrimeFiction from Bruce Graeme, reissued by @moonstone_press #amreading
A review of Ten Trails to Tyburn by Bruce Graeme – 230221 Ten Trails to Tyburn is the fifth in Bruce Graeme’s series featuring bookseller and library owner, Theodore Terhune, originally published in 1944 and reissued by Moonstone Press. A bibliomystery, Graeme once more experiments with the format of the crime fiction genre, producing an entertaining and engaging if somewhat overlong story. A…
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