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Jeremy York (2)

Author of Let's Kill Uncle Lionel

For other authors named Jeremy York, see the disambiguation page.

Jeremy York (2) has been aliased into John Creasey.

24+ Works 132 Members 3 Reviews

Series

Works by Jeremy York

Works have been aliased into John Creasey.

Let's Kill Uncle Lionel (1947) 17 copies
Run away to murder (1947) 14 copies
Mystery Motive (1947) 12 copies
Murder Came Late (1946) 11 copies, 1 review
Close the Door on Murder (1948) 8 copies
The Gallows Are Waiting (1949) 7 copies
The Man I Killed (1950) 6 copies
So soon to die (1955) 6 copies
Death to My Killer (1950) 5 copies
Two for the Money (1962) 5 copies, 1 review
Seeds of murder (1956) 5 copies
Sight of Death (1956) 5 copies
Hide and kill (1959) 4 copies
To Kill or Die (1960) 4 copies
Sentence of Death (1950) 3 copies
By Persons Unknown (1941) — Author — 3 copies
Safari with fear (1953) 2 copies
Stranger on the Shore 1 copy, 1 review
The Seeds of Murder (1956) 1 copy

Associated Works

Works have been aliased into John Creasey.

Lame Dog Murder (1952) — some editions — 12 copies
Murder In the Stars (1953) — some editions — 10 copies
Take a Body (1951) — some editions — 7 copies
Man on the Run (1953) — some editions — 6 copies
First a Murder (1947) — some editions; some editions — 6 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Creasey, John

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
Wow! Another amazing mystery by Lanyon! Yeah, like someone is going to be surprised by this :P

But really, the way the plot slowly unravels in this one is truly fantastic. Atmospheric, so in the vein of 'The Great Gatsby', these characters are never really, truly in the world the rest of us inhabits.

The mystery is deepened by old lies, omissions and secrets and although a part of it you can suspect early enough, the truth, when revealed, is still shocking.

The romance is secondary, but not show more undeveloped. Griffin and Pierce made an unlikely pair, all their relationship shadowed by the mystery, by Pierce suspicious about who really Griffin is, and by their own issues:
“My ex says I have intimacy issues. I wonder if that’s the same thing.”
“No.” Pierce turned off his laptop and set it aside. He turned on his side facing Griff, propping his head on his hand. “‘Intimacy issues’ is code for ‘I haven’t met the right person.’”
“And what is ‘trust issues’ code for?”
Pierce held his gaze. “I’m afraid to believe I’ve met the right person.”


Another to the favourites shelf :)
show less
Young married couple Daniel and Sarah Ede have just about had enough of living with her mother, but Daniel loves the studio they created for his sculpting. Still, after his vagabond cousin Barnabas comes for a visit, Daniel realizes that things are worse than he had realized. Soon a series of violent attacks place Daniel right at the center, as either victim or attacker. Superintendent Folly of Scotland Yard arrives just in time to sort things out.

This is one written by the prolific John show more Creasey under the pseudonym Jeremy York. Not up to his Gideon books, my all-time favorite, but still a good book. I wasn't exactly floored by the time the identity of the bad guy was revealed, but it was still good, suspenseful fun. show less
Sappy.
Noted during my 1980's attempt to read every book in my small town library.
½

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Statistics

Works
24
Also by
8
Members
132
Popularity
#153,554
Rating
3.1
Reviews
3
ISBNs
13

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