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Stories of the railway

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248
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~4h 8min
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English
LANGUAGE
Routledge & Kegan Paul 7 views
ISBN
0710086350
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About Author

Victor L. Whitechurch

> Victor Lorenzo Whitechurch was a British author born in 1868. He became first a curate and then, in 1904, vicar of St Michael’s church in Blewbury, Berkshire. In his later career he was Chaplain to the Bishop of Oxford and, from 1918, Rural Dean of Aylesbury. His first novel, The Course of Justice, was published in 1903, and a prolific writing career followed. Whitechurch’s detective Thorpe Hazell was a vegetarian railway detective, written as an antidote to Sherlock Holmes. Stories featuring Hazell were featured in Strand Magazine, Railway Magazine, and Pearson’s and Harmsworth’s magazines.

Description

Canon Victor Lorenzo Whitechurch was a celebrated crime writer and an expert railway enthusiast. He wrote a large number of crime short stories set in the golden age of Britain's railways, and a selection of the best of these was published in 1912 as Thrilling Stories of the Railway. A faultless constructor of mystery plots, Whitechurch was also one of the first writers to make a proper study of police procedure; the hero of many of these stories, Thorpe Hazell, was described by Ellery Queen as the first 'speciality' detective, and was greatly admired by Dorothy L. Sayers. All the stories in this collection, many of which are tales of adventure and action as much as of detection, are linked to the railway, and have titles redolent of the Edwardian period, such as 'The Affair of the Corridor Express', 'The Affair of the German Dispatch-Box' and 'How the Bishop Kept his Appointment'.

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