Foto dell'autore

Bruce Graeme (1900–1982)

Autore di Drums of Destiny

77+ opere 222 membri 2 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Serie

Opere di Bruce Graeme

Drums of Destiny (1947) 24 copie
Blackshirt (1925) 10 copie
The Golden Pagans (1956) 10 copie
The Undetective (1954) 9 copie
The Return of Blackshirt (1927) 8 copie
A Case of Books (1946) (2021) 7 copie
Alias Blackshirt (1932) 5 copie
Twilight of the Dragon (1954) 5 copie
Epilogue (1933) 4 copie
Flames of Empire (1949) 4 copie
Monsirur Blackshirt (1935) 3 copie
And a Bottle of Rum (2022) 3 copie
Gateway to Fortune (1952) 3 copie
Black Saga (1947) 3 copie
Hate Ship (1928) (1928) 3 copie
The Imperfect Crime (1932) 3 copie
Unsolved (1931) 3 copie
Blackshirt the Audacious (1935) 3 copie
Son of Blackshirt (1941) 2 copie
The Corporal Died in Bed (1940) 2 copie
The Golden Road (1951) 2 copie
Satan's Mistress (1935) 2 copie
Not Proven (1935) 2 copie
Madam Spy (UK) (1935) 2 copie
Ten Thousand Shall Die (1951) 2 copie
Body Unknown (1939) 2 copie
Blackshirt Again (1929) 2 copie
Impeached (1933) 2 copie
Gigins court 1 copia
Poisoned sleep (1939) 1 copia
No Clues for Dexter (1948) 1 copia
Naked Tide (1958) 1 copia
An International Affair (1934) 1 copia
Trouble! 1 copia
Blackshirt, Counter Spy (1938) 1 copia
La belle Laurine (1926) 1 copia
PESADELO 1 copia
Invitation to Mather (1980) 1 copia
Blackshirt takes a hand (1937) 1 copia
Blackshirt interferes (1939) 1 copia
Without Malice (1946) 1 copia
Lord Blackshirt (1942) 1 copia
Calling Lord Blackshirt (1943) 1 copia
Blackshirt strikes back (1940) 1 copia

Opere correlate

My Best Mystery Story (1939) — Collaboratore — 6 copie
My Best Thriller (1947) — Collaboratore — 5 copie
Best Legal Stories 2 (1970) — Collaboratore — 2 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Utenti

Recensioni

After reading The Imperfect Crime by "Bruce Graeme" (Graham Montague Jeffries), I sat down to chase up the next book in his Stevens and Allain series---but found instead a Superintendent Stevens standalone called Epilogue which, as far as I can tell, represents the first attempt at writing an ending to Dickens' unfinished last novel, The Mystery Of Edwin Drood. To tell his story, Graeme has Superintendent William Stevens and his subordinate, Detective-Sergeant Arnold, mysteriously transported back to Victorian England---to the year 1857, when Sir Richard Mayne is the head of Scotland Yard, when the idea of the "police detective" is still in its infancy, and modern policing methods have yet to be so much as imagined. Stevens and Arnold are assigned a new case by Mayne, the disappearance of a young man named Edwin Drood, which occurred upon Christmas Eve, some eight months previously, in the cathedral town of Cloisterham... Epilogue is a very odd novel indeed, part whodunit, part history lesson, part fantasy. The latter is perhaps the least successful part of the story: simply think of the most obvious explanation you can for the police officers' experience, and you'll probably be right. However, the apparent time-travelling is merely a peg for Graeme to hang his story on. On the whole, the author does a good job reproducing Dickens' characters, and recreating the town of Cloisterham. More importantly, he plays fair both with Dickens and his own premise by following the hints laid out in The Mystery Of Edwin Drood to their natural conclusion, while holding his modern detectives to the systems and techniques of detection that would have been available to them in the mid-Victorian period (while still exercising modern detective thinking). Despite these limitations, Stevens and Arnold come to the same conclusion that, I suspect, most readers of Dickens' mystery do, and are finally able to close the book on Edwin Drood. Despite the darkness of the overarching story, a tone in keeping with Dickens' own, there is plenty of humour in Epilogue, though not all of it is successful. Superintendent Stevens, usually the most taciturn of Englishmen, finds himself quite unable to bite his tongue here, and gets himself in endless trouble via references to events that haven't yet happened and things that do not exist---and which, in the opinion of most of his auditors, never could. While some of this is exasperating (Oh, just shut up! you find yourself thinking, as Stevens bumbles through yet another recantation of something he shouldn't have said), it does culminate in a very funny courtroom scene, during which Stevens - perhaps feeling he may as well be hanged for a sheep as for a lamb - reveals all sorts of shocking details about the future; and while the court receives his intimations of World War I almost without flinching, it is rocked to its very foundation by Stevens' insistence that in the not-too-distant future, the world will contain such an abomination as - gasp! - women barristers...… (altro)
1 vota
Segnalato
lyzard | Aug 10, 2016 |
I really wanted to like this book, but the writing flaws defeated me. The descriptions of the Queen Mary--the building, furnishings, and what it meant to British shipbuilding--were fun and interesting. Also, he included female characters and was interested in their points of view and interests. Unfortunately, the mystery plot wandered all over, there wasn't a consistent protagonist, and the solution was less than satisfying. Also, one of the (several) subplots depended on a character going by an alias, and the real name and the alias were mixed up in the course of the book, whoops. I'm not sorry I read it, because I love a mystery on board ship, but I won't be looking for more by Graeme.… (altro)
1 vota
Segnalato
biscuits | Feb 13, 2013 |

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Statistiche

Opere
77
Opere correlate
4
Utenti
222
Popolarità
#100,929
Voto
½ 3.4
Recensioni
2
ISBN
28
Lingue
2

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