Imagen del autor

Roy Vickers (1889–1965)

Autor de The Department of Dead Ends: 14 Detective Stories

71+ Obras 295 Miembros 9 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: Photo by Bassano, found at National Portrait Gallery website

Series

Obras de Roy Vickers

Murdering Mr Velfrage (1950) 21 copias
Double Image (1955) 7 copias
Seven chose murder (2012) 4 copias
Murder in Two Flats (1952) 4 copias
The whispering death (1947) 3 copias
Murder will out (2012) 3 copias
Murder of a Snob (1949) 3 copias
Four Past Four 3 copias
Best Police Stories (1966) 3 copias
Bardelow's heir 3 copias
His Other Wife 2 copias
Find the Innocent (2012) 2 copias
Maid to Murder 2 copias
The Sole Survivor (Bello) (2012) 2 copias
Six Came to Dinner (1948) 2 copias
The Judge's Dilemma (1939) 1 copia
The gold game 1 copia
They Can't Hang Caroline (2002) 1 copia
Uncanny Tales 1 copia
Kidnap Island 1 copia
Ishmael's wife (1928) 1 copia
Red hair 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

The Oxford Book of English Detective Stories (1990) — Contribuidor — 400 copias
El festín de los asesinos (1984) — Contribuidor — 194 copias
Blood on the Tracks (2018) — Contribuidor — 178 copias
Murder by the Book: Mysteries for Bibliophiles (2021) — Contribuidor — 172 copias
Mystery Cats: Feline Felonies (1991) — Contribuidor — 132 copias
Bodies from the Library (2018) — Contribuidor — 123 copias
The Long Arm of the Law (2017) — Contribuidor — 84 copias
The Big Book of Female Detectives (2018) — Contribuidor — 81 copias
The Mammoth Book of Great Detective Stories (1985) — Contribuidor — 80 copias
The Penguin Classic Crime Omnibus (1984) — Contribuidor — 54 copias
Rogues' Gallery: The Great Criminals of Modern Fiction (1945) — Contribuidor — 27 copias
Best Detective Stories (1959) — Contribuidor — 17 copias
The Queen's Awards: Sixth Series (1953) — Contribuidor — 15 copias
The Black Cabinet (1989) — Contribuidor — 7 copias
Classic short stories of crime and detection, 1950-1975 (1983) — Contribuidor — 6 copias
My Best Mystery Story (1939) — Contribuidor — 6 copias
Some Like Them Dead (1960) — Contribuidor — 5 copias
Crime Writers' Choice (1964) — Contribuidor — 3 copias
Planned Departures (1958) — Contribuidor — 3 copias
Detective-verhalen — Contribuidor — 3 copias
Best Stories from Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine (1944) — Contribuidor — 2 copias
Butcher's Dozen (1956) — Contribuidor — 2 copias
A Magnum of Mysteries (1963) — Contribuidor — 2 copias
Great Stories of Detection (1960) — Contribuidor — 2 copias
Choice of Weapons (1958) — Contribuidor — 1 copia
De bedste kriminalhistorier fra hele verden (1966) — Contribuidor — 1 copia
Sixteen On: An Anthology of Railway Stories — Contribuidor — 1 copia
Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine - 1952/06 — Contribuidor — 1 copia
Nye kriminalhistorier (1969) — Contribuidor — 1 copia
Murder Mixture: An Anthology of Crime Stories (1963) — Contribuidor — 1 copia
Ellery Queen's 1966 Anthology — Contribuidor — 1 copia
Verdens beste kriminalhistorier — Contribuidor — 1 copia
Det ligner mord. 10 moderne detektivhistorier — Autor, algunas ediciones1 copia

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Decent short detective stories. My favourite was the one about the cat.
 
Denunciada
AnneMarieMcD | Jan 16, 2024 |
This collection of 10 short stories from the Department of Dead Ends describes criminal cases that have gone cold and are solved when an obscure clue turns up in the Dead End department. Each story has a similar formula: it begins with a description of the crime so you know from the beginning who committed the crime. then, 1-2 chapters before the end, a clue turns up that allows the police to capture the criminal.

The book is highly recommended to any fans of early British crime fiction
 
Denunciada
M_Clark | 3 reseñas más. | Dec 13, 2016 |
English mystery writer William Edward Vickers (1889-1965) was best known under his pen name Roy Vickers, although he also wrote under the names David Durham, Sefton Kyle, and John Spencer. He found his literary stride when he published his short story, "The Rubber Trumpet," the first of over three dozen stories originally published in Pearson's Magazine and featuring the fictitious Department of Dead Ends division of Scotland Yard (a precursor to TV's "Cold Case," if you will). Many of these are inverted mysteries, with the crime and perpetrators being known and the crime solved as much by luck and perseverance than brilliant detection.

The central sleuth in Vickers' Department of Dead Ends stories started as being Superintendent Tarrant and in the later stories switched to Inspector Rason. However, Vickers also wrote eight novels in a more traditional procedural style featuring Detective-Inspector Peter Curwen. Find the Innocent was the final Curwen installment, published in 1959. He's described by one character as being "large, rotund and homely, looking like a successful local auctioneer who contemplates retirement."

Three scientists, Eddis, Stranack and Canvey, are all suspects in the murder of their employer, Mr. "WillyBee" Brengast, who had refused to grant them royalties on their inventions. The trio work and live together at WillyBee Products Ltd., yet they detest one another. Each man gives the same story to the police—each claims the same alibi, that he was the one to stay behind alone with the victim while the other two men went into town together. It's obvious to Inspector Curwen that one man must be guilty and the other two abetting, but which is which? Complicating matters are the victim's beautiful young widow whose one-night stand with one of the scientists plays a key role, and the victim's brainy niece who "helps" Inspector Curwen while falling for another of the suspects.

I've not read much of Vickers' output, but I came across one criticism that his novels paled in comparison to his stories, and I think I can understand why that might be the case. The premise of Find the Innocent is promising—three suspects who give the same story with little or no evidence to prove or disprove which one is guilty—but I think the novel (novella, actually, as it's on the short side) would have worked even better as a shorter story.
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
BVLawson | Jun 14, 2014 |
The book's gimmick is that the Department of Dead Ends preserves unaccountable pieces of evidence - a child's rubber trumpet in the first story - and through indexing, memory or simple instinct manages to use them to unravel unsolved crimes. The stories have something of the appeal of Columbo - a clever (or more often, lucky) murderer getting away with it until one niggling little piece of evidence brings down their deception.

Most of the crimes are Edwardian, which gives them the feel of one of those `notorious local murders' books. This is a world of clerks, music-hall turns, pharmacist's assistants, and parlour-maids. The people are called Elsie, Ethel, Hilda, George, Constance. They are murdered for their insurance policies or out of sexual frustration by respectable chaps with high collars and little moustaches.

This is a good quality edition (at least I didn't notice many typos or formatting issues), and there is added value in the form of a short biography of Roy Vickers and an appreciation by Ellery Queen, no less.

Full review
… (más)
 
Denunciada
westwoodrich | 3 reseñas más. | Mar 30, 2013 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
71
También por
47
Miembros
295
Popularidad
#79,435
Valoración
½ 3.7
Reseñas
9
ISBNs
30
Idiomas
2

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