Autorenbild.

George Bagby (1906–1985)

Autor von Murder's Little Helper

109+ Werke 540 Mitglieder 15 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Hinweis zur Begriffsklärung:

(eng) Aaron Marc Stein used the pseudonyms George Bagby and Hampton Stone.

Aaron Marc Stein benutzte die Pseudonyme George Bagby und Hampton Stone.

Reihen

Werke von George Bagby

Murder's Little Helper (1964) 20 Exemplare
The Corpse With Sticky Fingers (1952) 19 Exemplare
Dead Storage (1956) 17 Exemplare
Blood Will Tell (1950) 15 Exemplare
Tod am Ententeich. (1956) 15 Exemplare
Red is for Killing (1954) 11 Exemplare
The Body in the Basket (1777) 11 Exemplare
Dead on Arrival (1954) 10 Exemplare
The Golden Creep (1982) 9 Exemplare
Dead Wrong (1957) 9 Exemplare
Scared to Death (1952) 9 Exemplare
Cop killer (1956) 9 Exemplare
Dirty Pool (1966) 9 Exemplare
Dead Drunk (1973) 9 Exemplare
Honest Reliable Corpse (1969) 9 Exemplare
Mysteriouser and Mysteriouser (1965) 8 Exemplare
Country and fatal (1980) 8 Exemplare
The Funniest Killer in Town (1967) 7 Exemplare
Corpse Candle (1967) 7 Exemplare
Coffin Corner (1950) 7 Exemplare
The Sitting Duck (1981) 6 Exemplare
The Real Serendipitous Kill (1971) 6 Exemplare
Drop Dead (1955) 6 Exemplare
The Real Gone Goose (1959) 6 Exemplare
Lock and Key (1973) 5 Exemplare
Chill Factor (1978) 5 Exemplare
The Rolling Heads (1979) 5 Exemplare
Innocent Bystander (1977) 5 Exemplare
Evil Genius (1961) 5 Exemplare
In cold blood (1948) 5 Exemplare
A Question of Quarry (1981) 4 Exemplare
Days of Misfortune (1949) 4 Exemplare
A Dirty Way to Die (1955) 4 Exemplare
Death Ain't Commercial (1951) 4 Exemplare
My Dead Body (1976) 4 Exemplare
Two in the bush (1976) 4 Exemplare
Murder at the piano (1936) 4 Exemplare
The Twin Killing 4 Exemplare
I could have died (1979) 4 Exemplare
Guaranteed to Fade (1978) 4 Exemplare
Mugger's day (1979) 4 Exemplare
Killer Boy Was Here (1970) 3 Exemplare
The Most Wanted (1983) 3 Exemplare
Better Dead (1978) 3 Exemplare
Nowhere? (1978) 3 Exemplare
Home and Murder (1962) 3 Exemplare
Alp Murder (1971) 3 Exemplare
The three-time losers (1958) 3 Exemplare
Lend Me Your Ears (1976) 3 Exemplare
Here Comes the Corpse (1944) 3 Exemplare
One dip dead (1979) 3 Exemplare
The Finger (1973) 3 Exemplare
Bird Walking Weather (1952) 3 Exemplare
Body search (1977) 3 Exemplare
Hangman's Row (1982) 3 Exemplare
The Corpse Wore A Wig (1940) 3 Exemplare
A Body for a Buddy (1981) 3 Exemplare
The Tough Get Going (1977) 2 Exemplare
Blood on the Stars (1964) 2 Exemplare
Murder Half Baked (1937) 2 Exemplare
Snare Andalucian — Autor — 2 Exemplare
The cradle and the grave (1948) 2 Exemplare
Kill is a Four-Letter Word (1968) 2 Exemplare
Und immer so hilfsbereit (1970) 2 Exemplare
Coffin Country (1976) 2 Exemplare
Deadly Delight (1967) 2 Exemplare
The Bombing Run (1983) 2 Exemplare
The Garbage Collector (1984) 2 Exemplare
Never Need an Enemy (1959) 2 Exemplare
Mexikansk likvaka 2 Exemplare
Frightened Amazon (1950) 2 Exemplare
Another Day-Another Death (1968) 2 Exemplare
Dream Boat 1 Exemplar
The Starting Gun 1 Exemplar
Ring Around a Murder (1936) 1 Exemplar
Sitting up Dead 1 Exemplar
The Dead Thing in the Pool (1952) 1 Exemplar
... and high water (1946) 1 Exemplar
Tidvattenlandet (1977) 1 Exemplar
The Sun Is a Witness (1940) (1940) 1 Exemplar
Pistols for two 1 Exemplar
Her body speaks (2013) 1 Exemplar
Spirals 1 Exemplar
Mask for Murder (1952) 1 Exemplar
We Saw Him Die (1947) 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Rechtmäßiger Name
Stein, Aaron Marc
Andere Namen
Stone, Hampton
Geburtstag
1906-11-15
Todestag
1985-08-29
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
USA
Geburtsort
New York, New York, USA
Wohnorte
New York, New York, USA
Ausbildung
Princeton University
Berufe
Reporter (New York Post)
Organisationen
Mystery Writers of America
Phi Beta Kappa
Preise und Auszeichnungen
MWA Grand Master (1979)
Hinweis zur Identitätsklärung
Aaron Marc Stein benutzte die Pseudonyme George Bagby und Hampton Stone.

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Things seem a little strange at Mrs. Carpenter’s, George Bagby’s neighbour. When she is found dead in her apartment, things go beyond strange and Bagby finds himself in the middle of solving a mystery.

Mrs. Carpenter is from an older generation where the men were the strong and women were only strong in domestic matters. She usually had a companion — another woman — to keep her company and assist her.

Mrs. Carpenter had just hired a new companion by the name of Geneva. Geneva wasn’t outgoing, but she was concerned about her responsibilities toward Mrs. Carpenter. When Geneva went out shopping one day and didn’t come back, it was out of character for her.

Mrs. Carpenter is later seen in the company of a handsome, younger man. Who is he and how did Mrs. Carpenter meet him, and why was he so attentive? This was strange.

A woman is found dead in Central Park. She has no face or features for easy identity. That is strange.

Bagby is a crime writer, who works closely with Inspector Schmidt, NYPD Chief of Homicide. The appearance of the body in the park starts off the two men on their searching for a killer and answers to the strange matters that arise.

Murder, missing people and subterfuge are just a few of the sub-plots that are untangled while Bagby and Schmidt investigate and compare notes while searching for answers.
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
ChazziFrazz | Jul 21, 2023 |
Back in the dark ages, when I was in graduate school, my spouse and I would occasionally visit the kind of book stores that featured old, used books. I developed a fondness for things which had been popular when my parents were young, things like James Oliver Curwood books and the like. I also found some aged mysteries, some of which I rather liked. I thought this book was one of them. Well, it was in terms of being a book bought back on those heady days, but it wasn't the book I was thinking it was when I saved it from my spouses desire to throw shit out. Still, in all, this wasn't a half bad read.

So, we are during the early parts of World War II, when people worried that enemy bombers might show up on our shores. Never mind that planes in those days couldn't fly far enough to reach our shores, from anywhere other than Canada or Mexico, neither of which were threats to the U.S. of A. Whatever, we had trial air-raid black outs back in olden times (I even vaguely remember a post-war, pre-cold-war one), and this book involves one of them.

Basically, it's an old-time murder mystery. A person in an appartment building is discovered to have been murdered, perhaps during a black-out test, or perhaps the black out was just a red-herring cover. Police Inspector Schmidt was in the building at the time, visiting his pal, George Bagby (yeah, the author's pen name is that of one of his protagonists, essentially the story's narrator). So, Inspector Schmidt, with "Baggy" tagging along, investigates. Baggy makes all kinds of wild conjectures as to who dunnit, while Insp. Schmidt remains mostly mum. I guess it's supposed to be sort of like Holmes and Watson. But it doesn't make a lot of sense that a professional cop would have a civilian side kick hanging around all the time. Holmes, himself, was an independent investigator, and not a government official. But forget about that, and the story's ok.

So, in no particular order, we have a wealthy industrialist with no heirs. He has designated someone else in the apartment building to take over his business, but unfortunately, his protégé is the one murdered. His secretary, whom he wanted to marry his protégé is also there. She is also a prominent member of the ARP, which I believe means Air Raid Patrol, i.e. the people who enforce the black outs. But the secretary doesn't want the protégé , rather, she is enamored with a young army lieutenant, who hangs around a lot. Then, there is a woman of sketchy repute, who seems to have an ex-con hiding around in her apartment when the air raid practice is going on. Oh, and alleged Russian princess and her devoted personal milkman (delivery guy—people did door-to-door milk delivery in olden times. Ah, I remember it well.), whose route changes whenever the princess moves and who delivers at unusual hours. And so on. At one time or another, pretty much every one of those people falls under plausible suspicion. But, Insp. Schmidt, unlike Baggy, does not act precipitately, and eventually uncovers the true murderer and reveals his/her motive.

It's an interesting cast of characters and a fun enough ride. No, it's not Dickens, or even Raymond Chandler, but it's good fun. If I could give out s and -s, I'd have marked it *** .
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
lgpiper | Jun 21, 2019 |
When Matt Erridge sets off for a ski trip in Vermont, he ends up stranded in a blizzard, and sets off on his cross country skis to find shelter. While out, he finds an old man dead in his car and is rescued by Stan, out saving people with his snowmobile. Matt ends up warm but in a house with a married couple with a baby where the woman might have been beaten and an irritating couple who were also found by Stan. Soon people are suspecting each other, particularly Matt, of murdering the old man for his diamonds as he is a local diamond dealer. The only one above suspicion is Stan's neighbour who is out of gas for his snowmobile and who travels everywhere on his snowshoes.

As tensions mount, so does suspicion, and this is one mystery that keeps you going until it's done. I give it three stars because that's about as much as I like a decent mystery of this sort most of the time.
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
Karin7 | Jan 20, 2016 |
Another of Bagby's reliable Inspector Schmidt mysteries; in this one a badly beaten man refuses to explain his condition.
 
Gekennzeichnet
antiquary | Aug 17, 2014 |

Auszeichnungen

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Statistikseite

Werke
109
Auch von
24
Mitglieder
540
Beliebtheit
#46,139
Bewertung
2.8
Rezensionen
15
ISBNs
87
Sprachen
3

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