• Three More Classic Detective Novels: Uncle Abner, Master of Mysteries; Cleek: The Man of the Forty Faces; Martin Hewitt, Investigator. See large image  

    Three More Classic Detective Novels: Uncle Abner, Master of Mysteries; Cleek: The Man of the Forty Faces; Martin Hewitt, Investigator. (eBook) By (author) Melville Davisson Post, By (author) Thomas W. Hanshew, By (author) Arthur Morrison

    Currently unavailable

    We can notify you when this item is back in stock and you don't have to register

    | Add to wishlist

    Short Description for Three More Classic Detective NovelsThe "Greatest American Detective" and More Meet the greatest American detective and the first great detective to follow in the footsteps of Sherlock Holmes If you enjoy mysteries set on foggy, gaslit streets with hansom cabs and horseless carriages rattling past, you will want to read all three of these unabridged reprintings of classic detective novels still unequaled today. First you'll meet t...
    Full description


Other books

Other people who viewed this bought
Showing items 1 to 10 of 10

 

Full description | Reviews | Bibliographic data

Full description for Three More Classic Detective Novels

  • The "Greatest American Detective" and More Meet the greatest American detective and the first great detective to follow in the footsteps of Sherlock Holmes If you enjoy mysteries set on foggy, gaslit streets with hansom cabs and horseless carriages rattling past, you will want to read all three of these unabridged reprintings of classic detective novels still unequaled today. First you'll meet the man the Encyclopedia of Mystery and Detection hails as "one of the greatest American detectives," Uncle Abner, as created by the man the Encyclopedia calls "the best American detective short story writer since Edgar Allan Poe," Melville Davisson Post. Uncle Abner is a tall, gangling backwoods figure of unflinching integrity and profound sagacity, who Post modeled on his hero Abraham Lincoln. Set in the backwoods during the presidency of Thomas Jefferson, you'll find the Uncle Abner stories every bit the "fast moving suspenseful tales" the Encyclopedia calls them. Next, meet 1910s Hamilton Cleek, created by Thomas W. Hanshew. Cleek was once the cat burglar London knew as "the man of forty faces" due to his unusual gift for disguise. But, love soon traps Cleek in a way Scotland Yard never could, and he is reborn as a foe of evil-doers, putting his vast knowledge of crime and the criminal world to use on cases that baffle the police. Finally, meet 1894's Martin Hewitt, who the Encyclopedia of Mystery and Detection celebrates as "the first popular detective to follow in the footsteps of Sherlock Holmes." Though the appearance of the short, rotund Hewitt, the creation of attorney Arthur Morrison, is the polar opposite of Holmes, the two detectives' gifts for ratiocination and approach to solvingcrimes are identical. Don't miss this trio of full-length classics, over eleven hundred pages in the original hardcover editions, for one bargain price.