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Sto caricando le informazioni... Bengal Firedi Lawrence Blochman
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An impending wedding and two fiancées lead to murder on the Indian subcontinent in this Golden Age mystery featuring British CID Insp. Leonidas Prike. Unsavory press agent Harrison J. Hoyt gets word that his American fiancée is arriving in Calcutta--just in time for his wedding to someone else. To diffuse the situation, he turns to gold broker Lee Marvin. After all, Marvin owes him his life; it's the least he could do. But as Marvin delivers the bad news, he finds himself enchanted by the resilient blonde . . . Though Hoyt's bachelor dinner goes off without a hitch, he soon disappears after slipping Marvin a mysterious package. And when he shows up at his wedding the next day, it's as a corpse. The police surgeon suspects natural causes, but Inspector Prike and Marvin, who is convinced that Hoyt's dirty dealings have finally brought the man down, think otherwise. But what Marvin took possession of the night before--a nine-jewel talisman--ensnares him in the same web of duplicity. Hot on the case, Inspector Prike must untangle threads of blackmail, betrayal, and deception among Calcutta's upper crust, including Marvin, both jilted fiancées, a Maharajah, a big-game hunter, a disreputable journalist, and a Hawaiian purveyor of cheap cotton goods. What started out as a love triangle reveals the cold-hearted treachery of a very clever killer . . . "An exceptionally well-written novel." --The Glasgow Herald Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Blochman gives more attention to physical descriptions of the characters than to the development of the mystery plot. The third person narration switches points of view between several characters, resulting in a non-linear time frame. Sometimes an event or clue is mentioned as if it had already been introduced to the reader, only to be described later in the text. Inspector Leonidas Prike regularly blurts out information he's acquired outside the reader's view and has been withholding from the reader as well as from other characters. The difficulty of trying to solve the case alongside the Inspector combined with the overt racism typical of many works written in that era made for an unsatisfactory reading experience. ( )