Discover
Book Series

50 classics of crime fiction, 1950-1975

Minsik users reviews
0.0 (0)
Other platforms reviews
3.3 (6)
8 books
Minsik want to read: 0
Minsik reading: 0
Minsik read: 0
Open Library want to read: 26
Open Library reading: 2
Open Library read: 21

About Author

Josephine Tey

Josephine Tey is one of the best-known and best-loved of all crime writers. She began to write full-time after the successful publication of her first novel, The Man in the Queue (1929), which introduced Inspector Grant of Scotland Yard. In 1937 she returned to crime writing with A Shilling for Candles, but it wasn't until after the Second World War that the majority of her crime novels were published. Josephine Tey died in 1952, leaving her entire estate to the National Trust.

Description

There is no description yet, we will add it soon.

Books in this Series

The Singing Sands (Inspector Alan Grant #6)

3.0 (4)
22

The young man with the tumbled black hair and the reckless eyebrows was dead in compartment B Seven on the night train from London. The only message he had left behind was a verse—a strange unfinished poem that haunted Inspector Grant—that spoke of talking beasts and singing sands guarding the way to Paradise. Even on sick leave in Scotland, Grant couldn't let the puzzle alone or relax and enjoy the heather until he had uncovered all the sinister details in one of the cleverest murders in criminal history!

Furious old women

0.0 (0)
6

Carolous Deene, Schoolmaster and sometime detective is called to the village of Gladhurst, some 40 miles from the school, by Mrs Bobbin, who asks him to unmask the murderer of her sister. — Here he meets a succession of colourful characters, including a paranoid ex-naval officer, a vicar who is permanently on the horns of a dilemma, his curate, who is more of a scoutmaster, a policeman who insists on being called a 'Police Officer', and an extraordinary number of furious old women.

A private view

3.0 (1)
7

"One-Man Show", also titled "A Private View", is later Appleby. Sir John has already been knighted and married, and has worked his way up to the position of Assistant Commissioner at New Scotland Yard. He and his wife, Lady Judith (a sculptress by profession) play equal roles in solving the double mystery of who murdered the young artist, Gavin Limbert, and who stole two very famous paintings from the Duke of Horton's estate.