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About the Author

Series

Works by Vernon Loder

The Mystery at Stowe (1928) 33 copies
The Essex Murders (1930) 13 copies
The Vase Mystery (2018) 11 copies
The Radio Mystery (1950) 10 copies
Between Twelve and One (1929) 9 copies
Death of an Editor (1931) 8 copies
Death by the Gaff (1932) 7 copies, 1 review
Murder From Three Angels (1934) 5 copies
This Delicate Murder (2020) 5 copies
Death at the Horse Show (1935) 5 copies
Whose Hand? (1929) 5 copies
Red Stain (1931) 5 copies
The Button in the Plate (1938) 5 copies
Two Dead (1934) 4 copies
Barkworth's last year : a school story (1932) 4 copies, 2 reviews
The Little Man Murders (1936) 4 copies
Power on the Scent (2020) 3 copies
Witness in support (2021) 2 copies
The Ghost Party 2 copies
The Deaf-Mute Murders (1936) 2 copies
Suspicion 2 copies, 1 review
Conspiracy 1 copy
Mr. Nemesis 1 copy
The mesh 1 copy
Crime In The Arcade (1931) 1 copy
Down River 1 copy
Arrest 1 copy
Up north 1 copy
The new zoo 1 copy
Payment down 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Vahey, John George Haslette
Other names
Clandon, Henrietta
Haslette, John
Lang, Anthony
Mowbray, John
Proudfoot, Walter
Varney, George
Birthdate
1881
Date of death
1938
Gender
male
Education
Foyle College, Londonderry, Northern Ireland, UK
Occupations
detective novelist
Short biography
See: http://gadetection.pbworks.com/w/page/7930959/Loder,-Vernon
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK
Places of residence
Northern Ireland, UK
Associated Place (for map)
Northern Ireland, UK

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
Death By The Gaff is written by Vernon Loder and is a golden age mystery that was originally published in 1932. The mystery revolves around a fly fishing resort on the banks of a river in North Wales. A very unlikeable guest’s body is found trapped in the river with strange wounds in his throat.
These wounds appear to have been made by a gaff, which is a huge hook attached to a long pole and is used to pull in large salmon. Just about everyone who came near this murdered man disliked him so show more there were plenty of suspects and the author made good use of this device making it difficult to decide which one of many was the guilty one.

I loved the setting of this remote hotel and the descriptions of the various pools along the river. Having grown up with a fly fishing father, I enjoyed all the references to that sport. Two of the guests played at being detective, and while they were likeable and intelligent, it was the slow, steady detecting done by the police inspector in charge of the case that eventually brought about the actual solution.

Overall I found Death By The Gaff to be a clever and fun read as it offers a little more than being just a simple “whodunnit”.
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A crime novel from the classic period which does not succeed in getting the reader involved with either the characters or the crime.
Cheerful and bright cover design of two batsmen with red caps marching out to bat, one looking confident, the other more thoughtful.
On dustjacket in colour and as frontispiece in black and white, Blaber and Barkworth stride out to bat, one with 'a face as long as a fiddle', the other with 'a grin on his lips'.

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Statistics

Works
67
Members
251
Popularity
#91,085
Rating
3.0
Reviews
4
ISBNs
18

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