Autoren-Bilder

Brian Flynn (1) (1885–1958)

Autor von The Billiard-Room Mystery

Andere Autoren mit dem Namen Brian Flynn findest Du auf der Unterscheidungs-Seite.

32 Werke 292 Mitglieder 2 Rezensionen

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Werke von Brian Flynn

The Billiard-Room Mystery (1927) 35 Exemplare
The Murders Near Mapleton (1929) 22 Exemplare
The Five Red Fingers (1929) 14 Exemplare
Murder En Route (2019) 13 Exemplare
The Creeping Jenny Mystery (1932) 11 Exemplare
Invisible Death (1929) 11 Exemplare
The Triple Bite (2019) 9 Exemplare
Tread Softly (2020) 9 Exemplare
The Orange Axe (2019) 9 Exemplare
Fear and Trembling (2020) 9 Exemplare
The Spiked Lion (2020) 8 Exemplare
The League of Matthias (2020) 7 Exemplare
The Case of the Purple Calf (2020) 7 Exemplare
The Sussex Cuckoo (2020) 7 Exemplare
The Padded Door (2020) 6 Exemplare
The Edge of Terror (2020) 6 Exemplare
The Horn (2020) 6 Exemplare
The Ebony Stag (2021) 6 Exemplare
The Fortescue Candle (2020) 5 Exemplare
Cold Evil (2021) 5 Exemplare
They Never Came Back (2021) — Autor — 4 Exemplare
Reverse the Charges (2021) — Autor — 4 Exemplare
The Sharp Quillet (1947) 4 Exemplare
The Grim Maiden (2021) — Autor — 4 Exemplare
Black Edged (2021) 4 Exemplare
The Case of the Painted Ladies (2021) 3 Exemplare
The Case of the Faithful Heart (2021) 3 Exemplare
Exit Sir John (1947) 3 Exemplare
Tragedy at Trinket 1 Exemplar
Kaleidoscope 1 Exemplar

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Geburtstag
1885
Todestag
1958
Geschlecht
male

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Once again, a least likely suspect you can smell coming from a mile away, even if you can't figure out why.
 
Gekennzeichnet
EricaObey | Mar 1, 2023 |
At the country house of the Considine family, a young man called Geoffrey Prescott is brutally murdered in the middle of the night. His body is found in the billiard-room, sprawled across the billiard table. A dagger, an artefact from a collection belonging to the party's host, Sir Charles Considine, has been driven into his neck; but it is determined that he was dead before this was done, strangled with his own shoe-lace. When it is discovered that Lady Considine's famous pearls have been stolen, it is assumed that Prescott stumbled into the burglary and was killed by the thief; although the circumstances of his death hardly support that theory. It is what everyone wants to believe, however---because otherwise the killer must be sought amongst the Considines' house-guests... This 1927 mystery is the first of an astonishing 54 novels by Brian Flynn to feature amateur detective, Anthony Bathurst. That being the case, I can only hope that the later ones are toned down a bit, since - as was not uncommon at the time - Bathurst is a walking bundle of annoying, post-Peter-Wimsey affectations. (Though to be fair, when he speaks for himself in the final chapter, tying up loose ends, Bathurst is less annoying than when being narrated by his friend and fellow-guest, Bill Cunningham, who becomes his "Watson"). There are other dubious choices here, too: Bathurst's qualifications for the job consist of nothing more than his own calm assumption of mental superiority, a total-recall memory, and the feeling that he might be good at this sort of thing; nevertheless, we subsequently find an experienced police inspector allowing this officious amateur to butt into his investigation, not only on first acquaintance, but at a point when, realistically, Bathurst should be considered a potential suspect. All that said, The Billiard-Room Mystery does offer a pretty good story, with some interesting plotting and clues: this is one of those mysteries where two different crimes get tangled up, and the investigation must determine how far they are connected. On the other hand---you may imagine my indignant astonishment when it slowly dawned upon me that Brian Flynn had lifted the dénouement of his plot wholesale from another, and ultimately much more famous, mystery published not long before: I'm guessing that Flynn badly underestimated that book's eventual popularity and staying-power. While the final stages of the story were unfolding, it actually occurred to me to wonder whether Flynn was playing that particular game---but I concluded that he wouldn't have had the nerve. More fool me...

"When we were called to this room at seven o'clock that morning by Marshall, the three balls were in the pocket then. I can recall them distinctly---Prescott's body was lying across the bottom of the table. He was partly on his right shoulder, and his right arm was hanging over the side---very near the pocket where I've found the I.O.U. I can remember looking at the limp arm there---and then looking into the pocket and seeing the balls. I can---" He stopped suddenly. "But there's something wrong somewhere, there's a difference---there's a---" he thrust his hands into his pockets and paced the room. When he turned in my direction again I could see that his eyes were closed. He was thinking hard. "It will come to me," he muttered. "There was the arm---there were the three balls---there was the dagger---"
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
lyzard | Jan 22, 2016 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
32
Mitglieder
292
Beliebtheit
#80,152
Bewertung
3.1
Rezensionen
2
ISBNs
64
Sprachen
1

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