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Mar 20, 1868 — Jun 27, 1942· 74 yrs

UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND AUTHOR · FICTION · DETECTIVE AND MYSTERY

Ernest Bramah

Also known as: Ernest Bramah Smith, Ernest Brammah Smith

16
BOOKS
3.3
AVG RATING (3)
1
READERS
Manchester, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
Wikipedia

ESTIMABLE BARBARIAN,-Your opportune suggestion that I should permit the letters, wherein I have described with undeviating fidelity the customs and manner of behaving of your accomplished race, to be set forth in the form of printed leaves for all to behold, is doubtless gracefully-intentioned, and this person will raise no barrier of dissent against it.

— from The Mirror of Kong Ho

Most acclaimed

#2

The Mirror of Kong Ho

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A lively and amusing set of stories, constructed as a series of letters dealing with the oddities and eccentricities of the West, purportedly written by Kong Ho, a Chinese man visiting early 20th century London. First published 1905.

#1

The Rivals of Sherlock Holmes

3.0 (1)

Sherlock Holmes was not the only detective solving mysteries and foiling the plans of criminal masterminds in Victorian and Edwardian England. The years from 1890 to 1914 were a golden age for English magazines and most of them published crime and detective fiction. The success of the Holmes stories spawned countless imitators. This volume highlights some of those rivals of Sherlock Holmes. They include: >THE THINKING MACHINE - Jacques Futtrelle's intellectual genius Professor Augustus S. F. X. Van Dusen, the Thinking Machine, capable of solving the most baffling mysteries through brainpower alone. >CARNACKI THE GHOST FINDER - detective of the occult created by the legendary horror writer William Hope Hodgson. >NOVEMBER JOE - Hesketh Prichard's Canadian woodsman who uses his extraordinary powers of observation to track down villains and bring them to justice. >CRAIG KENNEDY - Arthur B. Reeve's scientific detective from the early 1900s who uses startling new technological advancements like X-rays and microphones. It may well be true that there has never been a detective quite like Sherlock Holmes, but he did not stand alone. He had his rivals and, as this collection of short stories shows, many of their adventures were as exciting and entertaining as those of the master himself.

#3

The moon of much gladness

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Featuring a female detective, who has disguised herself as a young man solves two tricky cases, the first dealing with the disappearance of a Mandarins long fingernails and his hair (both badges of his office, without which he would look silly). The second, more tricky case inolves treason. Both cases are resolved with the typical understated humour of Ernest Bramah. The pastiche of Western detectives (Father brown, Sherlock Holmes, and others is a literary treat that will tickle any funny-bone.

Books

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