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Book Series

Pantheon international crime

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5
BOOKS
1,132
PAGES
~18h 52min
READING TIME

About Author

James McClure

James McClure may refer to: James G. K. McClure (1848-1932), American Presbyterian minister, author, and educator James H. McClure (1939–2006), British crime author and journalist, born in South Africa Jim McClure (politician) (1924–2011), U.S. senator from Idaho James McClure (Unionist politician) (1926–2014), Northern Ireland politician James Focht McClure Jr. (1931–2010), U.S. federal judge James McClure (table tennis) (1916–2005), American table tennis player James Howe McClure (1851–1909), Scottish rugby football player James Warren McClure (1919–2004), newspaper executive and publisher Jimmy McClure (fl.

Description

Investigating the murder of a local baker during an amateur theatrical production, curmudgeon Agatha Raisin and her team of private detectives uncover a web of feuds and temperamental behaviors that place the team in mortal danger.

How the series evolves

beginning
The blood of an Englishman
0.0· tough start
finale
The Last House-party
0.0· messes up the ending
overall
0.0· maybe series needed more care

Books in this Series

The blood of an Englishman

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Investigating the murder of a local baker during an amateur theatrical production, curmudgeon Agatha Raisin and her team of private detectives uncover a web of feuds and temperamental behaviors that place the team in mortal danger.

Mord på 31

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In an unnamed country, in an unnamed year sometime in the future, Chief Inspector Jensen of the Sixteenth Division is called in after the publishers controlling the entire country's newspapers and magazines receive a threat to blow up their building, in retaliation for a murder they are accused of committing. The building is evacuated, but the bomb fails to explode and Jensen is given seven days in which to track down the letter writer. Jensen has never had a case he could not solve before, but as his investigation into the identity of the letter writer begins it soon becomes clear that the directors of the publishers have their own secrets, not least the identity of the 'Special Department' on the thirty first floor; the only department not permitted to be evacuated after the bomb threat.