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John Rhode (1)

Autor de Fatal Descent

Para otros autores llamados John Rhode, ver la página de desambiguación.

John Rhode (1) se ha aliado con Miles Burton.

85+ Obras 983 Miembros 14 Reseñas

Series

Obras de John Rhode

Las obras han sido aliasadas en Miles Burton.

Fatal Descent (1939) 61 copias
The Paddington Mystery (1925) 55 copias
Death in Harley Street (1945) 41 copias
Death at Breakfast (1936) 37 copias
Mystery at Olympia (1935) 30 copias
The Claverton Mystery (1933) 29 copias
The Robthorne Mystery (1934) 29 copias
The Motor Rally Mystery (1933) 28 copias
The Murders in Praed Street (1928) 26 copias
Invisible Weapons (1938) 25 copias
Death on the Boat Train (1940) 20 copias
The Venner Crime (1933) 20 copias
Death on the Board (1937) 18 copias
Pinehurst (1930) 17 copias
Dr Priestley's Quest (1926) 16 copias
Death in the Hop Fields (1937) 16 copias
The House On Tollard Ridge (1929) 15 copias
Peril at Cranbury Hall (1930) 15 copias
In Face of the Verdict (1936) 14 copias
Death At The Inn (1953) 14 copias
The Mysterious Suspect (1952) 14 copias
Up the Garden Path (1949) 14 copias
The Bloody Tower (1938) 13 copias
The Davidson Case (1929) 13 copias
Tragedy On The Line (1931) 13 copias
Proceed with Caution (1937) 12 copias
Murder at Lilac Cottage (1940) 12 copias
Licenced for Murder (1959) 12 copias
The Telephone Call (1948) 12 copias
Death of a Bridegroom (1958) 11 copias
Shot at Dawn (1934) 10 copias
The Corpse in the Car (1935) 10 copias
Death of an Author (1948) 10 copias
Vegetable Duck (1944) 10 copias
Death Takes a Partner (1958) 10 copias
The Ellerby Case (1927) 10 copias
Night Exercise (1942) 9 copias
Men Die at Cyprus Lodge (1944) 9 copias
The Elm Tree Murder (1939) 9 copias
Blackthorn House (1949) 9 copias
The White Menace (1924) 9 copias
Death in Wellington Road (1952) 8 copias
Open Verdict (1956) 8 copias
Tragedy At The Unicorn (1928) 8 copias
Bricklayer's Arms (1945) 8 copias
Hendon's First Case (1935) 8 copias
Dead on the Track (1943) 8 copias
Murder at Derivale (1958) 8 copias
Dr Goodwood's Locum (1951) 7 copias
Poison for One (1934) 7 copias
Mystery At Greycombe Farm (1932) 7 copias
Family Affairs (1950) 7 copias
Detection Medley (1939) — Editor — 7 copias
Dead Men at the Folly (1932) 7 copias
The Domestic Agency (1955) 7 copias
Nothing but the Truth (1947) 7 copias
They Watched by Night (1941) 6 copias
The Lake House (1946) 6 copias
The Two Graphs (1950) 6 copias
Three cousins die (1959) 5 copias
Death at the Dance (1952) 5 copias
Death on the Lawn (1958) 5 copias
The secret meeting (1951) 5 copias
The Paper Bag (1948) 5 copias
Death of an Artist (1956) 4 copias
Robbery With Violence (1957) 4 copias
Death Pays a Dividend (1939) 4 copias
Death Invades the Meeting (1944) 4 copias
Twice Dead (1960) 4 copias
Death of a Godmother (1955) 4 copias
Death at the Helm (1941) 3 copias
The Hanging Woman (1931) 3 copias
The Elusive Bullet (2011) 2 copias
The Fourth Bomb (1942) 2 copias
The Vanishing Diary (1961) 2 copias
The Dovebury murders (1954) 2 copias
The Alarm (1925) 1 copia
The Double Florin (1924) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Las obras han sido aliasadas en Miles Burton.

El almirante flotante (Club del Misterio 116, volum 16) (1931) — Contribuidor — 812 copias
The Oxford Book of English Detective Stories (1990) — Contribuidor — 402 copias
Ask a Policeman (1933) — Contribuidor — 195 copias
London After Midnight : A Tour of Its Criminal Haunts (1996) — Contribuidor — 136 copias
Bodies from the Library (2018) — Contribuidor — 126 copias
The Measure of Malice: Scientific Mysteries (2019) — Contribuidor — 85 copias
Tales of Detection (1940) — Contribuidor — 56 copias
The Anatomy of Murder (1936) — Contribuidor — 55 copias
Bodies from the Library 3 (2020) — Contribuidor — 44 copias
The Portable Murder Book (1945) — Contribuidor — 31 copias
The Boys' Second Book of Great Detective Stories (1940) — Contribuidor — 27 copias
The Great Book of Thrillers (1935) — Contribuidor — 27 copias
The Anatomy of Murder (1989) (1989) — Contribuidor — 22 copias
My Best Mystery Story (1939) — Contribuidor — 6 copias
Evening Standard Detective Book (1950) — Contribuidor — 5 copias
London After Midnight: A Conducted Tour, Part 2 (1996) — Contribuidor — 3 copias
Fra farezonen (1988) — Autor, algunas ediciones2 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
male

Miembros

Reseñas

Great good fun from two practiced masters of the impossible crime. The murderer and motive were a bit obvious, but the means were as ingenious as they come.
 
Denunciada
EricaObey | Dec 18, 2022 |
John Rhode is a pseudonym for John Cecil Street, who also wrote books using the names Miles Burton and Cecil Waye.

An intricate mystery involving a possibly haunted house, a small village, a country estate near a military camp, and military secrets being received by the German Minister in Ireland. As in another book from the Golden Age of British Mystery, someone who appears not quite right is worthy of more suspicion than he gets. There is also mention of a weird religious cult.

I liked the explanation of the name Cyprus Lodge, the house where mysterious deaths occur: Cypress trees surround the house, which in no way is anything like the definition of a lodge. [pp. 5-6] And I learned "the first armoured fighting vehicles [were] camouflaged as [water] tanks"! [p.127]

I read the book because I happened upon the website for the Edward Gorey House in Yarmouth Port, MA, which had an exhibit called "Murder He Wrote". The description lists some of Gorey's favorite murder mystery authors: Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers, Georgette Heyer, Josephine Tey, Michael Innes, Margery Allingham, Edmund Crispin, and Cecil Street. I would read another Street (aka John Rhode) if I saw one to give him a second change, but I wouldn't seek one out.
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
raizel | otra reseña | Sep 14, 2022 |
Victor Harleston drops dead shortly after sitting down to breakfast; he was quite obviously poisoned. All clues point to his half-siblings Janet and Philip as the likely culprits; after all, they are the only ones who seem to benefit from his death. However, when Victor’s boss, Mr. Knott, mysteriously disappears just a few days after Victor’s death, the case becomes more complicated. Although all clues point to Gavin Slater as Mr. Knott’s murderer, no one can find a body. And it is just too much of a coincidence to suppose that the two murders aren’t connected in some way. Superintendent Hanslet is once more on the case, which seems like a boon for criminals everywhere; fortunately, Dr. Lancelot Priestley is in the background to keep things in perspective.

The narrative begins with Victor Harleston’s murder and the investigation into that crime. Then, after Mr. Knott’s disappearance, the focus switches to the investigation of that mystery. Although the two crimes are interrelated and eventually connected, the sudden switch in focus from one to the other makes the story disjointed.

As usual, Inspector Hanslet comes across as a mindless buffoon. He is highly susceptible to manipulation, and always seems ready to believe the most obvious suspect just has to be guilty and should be immediately arrested. He routinely goes to Dr. Priestley for advice, but rarely seems inclined to take it. One has to imagine that, in cases for which Dr. Priestley is not consulted, countless criminals are walking free and that numerous innocent people have been dragged to the gallows just because of Hanslet’s gross incompetence.

Of course, Dr. Priestley is an equally disagreeable character in his own way. He appears to know the solution to the crimes very early on, but refuses to say directly what is on his mind. He just sort of sits in his armchair giving vague suggestions to Hanslet and Waghorn without explanation or elaboration, while secretly laughing at them behind their backs. Consequently, he comes across as incredibly pompous and self-absorbed. And, because he enjoys toying with the police like they are his personal playthings, the solution of the crime takes about five times longer than it should.

This is an interesting mystery with a well-crafted solution. Unfortunately, it drags on way too long and I found myself skimming towards the end.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
missterrienation | otra reseña | Mar 25, 2022 |
Nahum Pershore drops dead at the annual motor show at Olympia for no apparent reason. As the police begin their investigations, they discover three separate attempts on Mr. Pershore’s life have recently been made. It seems likely his sudden demise is a definite case of murder, but—with no obvious cause of death—how will it be proven?

There are certainly a lot of obvious suspects with a lot of obvious motives, and even a few that are not so obvious. There’s the niece who stands to inherit a hefty sum on Mr. Pershore’s death. And the nephew who stands to inherit next to nothing. Then again, Mr. Pershore seems to have engaged in some violent quarrels with all of his closest friends lately. He doesn’t seem to treat his former childhood sweetheart, now his housekeeper, with any great amount of civility either. And what about Mr. Pershore’s estranged half-brother Micah who made his own fortune in the Argentine, but whose present whereabouts are unknown? Oddly enough, many of the prime suspects just happen to be in attendance at the car show at the precise moment Mr. Pershore makes his final exit…that couldn’t just be a coincidence, or could it?

There is plenty of action and misdirection on hand in this entertaining whodunit.

A number of people really want Nahum Pershore dead, and it is easy to believe that any one of the suspects is actually guilty of the crime. Superintendent Hanslet, who is the primary investigator handling the case, comes across as somewhat of a buffoon; at various points throughout the story he is utterly convinced that every one of the suspects is undoubtedly the murderer. Most of the viable suspects do have the motives, means, and opportunities to commit the murder, and it kind of seems like the author may have just picked one out of a hat to bring the book to a conclusion. It is rather unfair that the reader is unable to work out the actual cause of death until Doctor Overland accidentally stumbles across it in an obscure medical journal late in the narrative. However, that does not really detract from the enjoyment value of the story.

Although it gets off to a slow start with a detailed discussion of automobile transmissions, this is an entertaining mystery that makes for a fun, weekend read.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
missterrienation | Mar 16, 2022 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
85
También por
21
Miembros
983
Popularidad
#26,196
Valoración
½ 3.4
Reseñas
14
ISBNs
73
Idiomas
2

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