Picture of author.

G. D. H. Cole (1889–1959)

Author of The Common People, 1746-1946

166+ Works 1,246 Members 12 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by G. D. H. Cole

The Common People, 1746-1946 (1938) 117 copies, 1 review
The Murder at Crome House (1927) 36 copies, 3 reviews
The meaning of Marxism (2018) 32 copies
The Death of a Millionaire (1925) 31 copies, 1 review
The Brooklyn Murders (1923) 31 copies
The people's front (1937) 19 copies
Chartist portraits (1989) 18 copies
Socialism in Evolution (1938) 14 copies
End of an Ancient Mariner (1933) 13 copies
Death in the Quarry (1934) 13 copies
Self-government in industry (1972) 12 copies
Last Will and Testament (1936) 12 copies, 1 review
Dead Man's Watch (1931) 11 copies, 1 review
The Blatchington Tangle (1926) 11 copies, 1 review
Burglars In Bucks (1930) 10 copies
Death of a Star (1932) 10 copies
Scandal at School (1935) 10 copies
Off with her Head! (1938) 9 copies
The Walking Corpse (1931) 9 copies
The Man From the River (1928) 9 copies
Big Business Murder (1935) — Author — 9 copies
The Condition of Britain (2021) — Author — 8 copies
Double Blackmail (1939) 7 copies
Robert Owen (2020) 7 copies
Dr. Tancred Begins (1935) 7 copies
The Missing Aunt (1937) 6 copies
A Lesson in Crime (1933) 6 copies
A century of co-operation (1944) 6 copies
The Brothers Sackville (1936) 6 copies
Samuel Butler (2005) 6 copies
Fabian socialism (1971) 5 copies
Knife in the Dark (1942) 5 copies
Social Theory (2023) 5 copies
Socialist economics (2010) 4 copies
What Marx Really Meant (1971) 4 copies
Death of a Bride (1945) 4 copies
Death in the sun 4 copies, 1 review
The Affair at Aliquid (1933) 4 copies
Counterpoint murder (1940) 3 copies
Greek Tragedy (1939) 3 copies
Essays in social theory (1979) 3 copies
Toper's End (1942) 3 copies
Oxford Poetry 1910-1913 (1914) — Editor — 3 copies
Disgrace to the College (1937) 2 copies
Wilson and some others (1940) 2 copies
Workshop organisation (1973) 2 copies
The Toys of Death 2 copies, 1 review
Building and Planning (1945) 1 copy
War Aims 1 copy
Selected Poems {The Ormond Poets} (1928) — Editor — 1 copy
Lyrics from the Plays — Editor — 1 copy
John Burns (1943) 1 copy
Oxford Poetry 1914 - 1916 (1917) — Editor — 1 copy
What is ahead of us? (2023) 1 copy
Fatal Beauty 1 copy
Economic planning (1971) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Moonstone (1868) — Introduction, some editions — 12,066 copies, 273 reviews
On the Social Contract (1762) — Translator, some editions — 5,128 copies, 42 reviews
Das Kapital (1867) — Introduction, some editions — 2,324 copies, 33 reviews
The Social Contract and Discourses (1973) — Translator, some editions — 979 copies, 1 review
The Floating Admiral (1931) — Contributor — 945 copies, 26 reviews
The Oxford Book of English Detective Stories (1990) — Contributor — 434 copies, 5 reviews
Murder by the Book: Mysteries for Bibliophiles (2021) — Contributor — 280 copies, 17 reviews
Miraculous Mysteries: Locked Room Mysteries and Impossible Crimes (2017) — Contributor — 160 copies, 11 reviews
Women Sleuths (1985) — Contributor — 141 copies, 3 reviews
101 Years' Entertainment: The Great Detective Stories 1841-1941 (1941) — Contributor — 111 copies, 1 review
Crime on Her Mind (1975) — Contributor — 109 copies, 1 review
Lady on the Case: 22 Female Detective Stories (1994) — Contributor — 82 copies
Masterpieces of Mystery : The Golden Age, Part 1 (1977) — Contributor — 73 copies, 2 reviews
Crimes of Cymru: Classic Mystery Tales of Wales (2023) — Contributor — 69 copies
Murder on a Winter's Night (2021) — Contributor — 54 copies, 1 review
Bodies from the Library 4 (2021) — Contributor — 47 copies, 1 review
Murder by the Seaside (2022) — Contributor — 41 copies
The Vintage Book of Classic Crime (1993) — Contributor — 37 copies
The Boys' Second Book of Great Detective Stories (1940) — Contributor — 33 copies
The Mystery Book (1934) — Contributor — 30 copies
The Great Book of Thrillers (1935) — Contributor — 29 copies
The Black Lizard Big Book of Locked-Room Mysteries (2019) — Contributor — 27 copies, 2 reviews
France 1940-1955 (1956) — Foreword, some editions — 24 copies
Fifty Famous Detectives of Fiction (1948) — Contributor — 22 copies
The Second Century of Detective Stories (1938) — Contributor — 13 copies
Essays in labour history (1967) — Honoree — 9 copies
Detection Medley (1939) — Contributor — 8 copies
The Big Book of Detective Stories (1935) — Contributor — 4 copies
Detective Stories of To-Day (1940) — Contributor — 3 copies
Selected Lyrics — Editor — 2 copies
The great detectives — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

13 reviews
A highly entertaining read, among the best by this married double act. When a body is found in the sea near a Devonshire village, Sir Charles Wylie decides that the local police are not competent enough to investigate it and starts doing so himself. There's an interesting combination of amateur and professional detection, with Sir Charles a fairly sympathetic figure despite his flaws, and Superintendent Wilson intervening to bring the whole thing to a rather sedate but satisfying ending. The show more identity of the killer isn't a total surprise, but nevertheless many people won't fathom the whole of the plot show less
Dick Preston, at his aunt’s invitation, is staying at the country home of Lord and Lady Blatchington. After an early swim on his first morning there, Dick visits the library only to stumble across the dead body of a man, who is not a member of the house party. Of course, the many guests and the members of the household all seem to have something they want to hide from the police. When an arrest is imminent, Superintendent Wilson, no longer of Scotland Yard, is asked to prove the innocence show more of the suspect.

I’m enjoying this series by GDH and Margaret Cole, which are good examples of Golden Age detective fiction. Not as good as a Christie, Sayers, Marsh, or Allingham, they are nonetheless enjoyable works. I’m surprised that the books were never republished, although the attitude toward African natives in this book may be very jarring unless one keeps in mind that the book was written in the 1920s and was unfortunately reflective of that time. I plan to read as many in this series as I can get from interlibrary loans.
show less
The Death of a Millionaire is the second book in the Superintendent Wilson series by GHD and Margaret Cole, who were members of the Detection Club. It is an excellent example of a piece of the Golden Age of Detection fiction, and I’m a little surprised that the British Library hasn't republished the series. The copy I borrowed from ILL was a copy of the first US edition.

Superintendent Wilson and Inspector Braikie are very stumped with the case of a millionaire whose secretary seems to have show more murdered him in his hotel room. No body was found -however, the blood found at the scene, a witness locked in the closet and several eyewitnesses reporting that the secretary left the hotel with a large trunk and the missing millionaire seem to be conclusive evidence.

Although I highly enjoyed this book, the plot seemed a little unnecessarily complex. Overall, I thought it worked well, as it was an original idea. I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys Golden Age detective fiction.
show less
Warning: for reasons explained below, this review may contain spoilers for another book by the Coles, Dr Tancred Begins.
Dr Ben Tancred is a private investigator who appears in two books by G. D. H. and M. Cole. Unusually, although both publlshed within a year of each other, they are set about twenty-five years apart. What is more, several of the characters in the earlier book also appear in this one, which means that they should be read in chronological order if possible. Unfortunately, they show more are both quite scarce books, particularly the first of the two, and I've only read this, the second. (It was reprinted some years ago as part of the Crime Club series "The Disappearing Detectives", but I don't think this had a very large print run.)
Dr Tancred is approached by an old acquaintance, Sarah Pendexter, in connection with the recent death of Lord St. Blaizey. She believes very strongly that it was murder (which view she shares with the doctor who examined the body) and that it was committed by her nephew, Rupert. However, this view appears to be mainly based on her claim that she saw the murder committed in a vision (she is a religious fanatic, and many people consider her insane). However, Tancred thinks that her other claim, to have seen Rupert riding on a horse in the vicinity of the crime (which was carried out by knocking the old man off his horse, in the woods near his residence), to be more credible, and eventually he decides to agree to investigate the case.
After consulting Superintendent Wilson (who was involved in the previous case, but plays only a small part in this one), Tancred goes down to the area where the victim lived (in Cornwall, near the river Fowey) and starts to look into the case. Another person whom he had met before is Rupert's sister Helen, who is now married to the victim's son, and hence has become Lady St Blaizey as a result of her father-in-law's death. Could she be involved in the murder? We have learned in the first chapter that she was previously tried for the murder of her stepfather (the story of this is told in the earlier book), and Ben was the main person responsible for her acquittal. He thought that he knew who really was the killer on the earlier occasion, but was unable to prove it, and that person is the principal suspect now. However, it takes a good deal of investigation to bring the case to a climax, with other issues involving a possibly forged will and a second murder.
It should be added that the book is set in a real area, with only slight changes to some place names (the reasons for which don't entirely make sense) and I was interested to note, by comparing the map provided with a modern road-map, that the area covered would today have to include the Eden Project!
show less

Lists

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
166
Also by
36
Members
1,246
Popularity
#20,594
Rating
3.9
Reviews
12
ISBNs
159
Languages
3
Favorited
1

Charts & Graphs