Edward Hardwicke (1932–2011)
Author of Classic Detective Stories (A CSA Word Classic)
About the Author
Image credit: Edward Harwicke
Works by Edward Hardwicke
Associated Works
The Return of Sherlock Holmes, Vol. 1: The Empty House & The Abbey Grange (TV episodes) (1986) — Actor — 9 copies
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Volume 2 (A CSA Word Classic) (2009) — Reader — 7 copies, 1 review
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Volume 1 (A CSA Word Classic) (2009) — Reader — 4 copies, 1 review
The Return of Sherlock Holmes: The Six Napoleons [1986 TV episode] (1986) — Dr Watson — 3 copies, 1 review
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes: The Solitary Cyclist — Dr Watson — 2 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1932-08-07
- Date of death
- 2011-05-16
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- actor
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- London, England, UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- England, UK
Members
Reviews
This is a rather strange collection and I can't help wondering about how it was put together.
(I couldn't help wondering if they were stories without any copyright hindrances).
To start with, the blurb on the CD pack of 4 CDs says that there are 10 stories, but there are only 8.
I have found the original edition containing 10 stories here.
The only "modern" authors are Colin Dexter and Muriel Spark, and my listening companion remarked how old fashioned some of the other stories felt.
The stories show more do introduce detectives such as Edgar Wallace's J.G. Reeder and Sax Rhomer's Morris Klaw, whom modern readers would not be familiar with. But to bill these particular eight stories as "some of the best crime fiction ever written" is rather misleading.
From an audio point of view, there was a bit of variability in volume level and recording quality, which was annoying.
The Father Brown story, Chesterton's The Man in the Passage was probably the cleverest, but I think I enjoyed the crispness of Chimes by Muriel Spark the best. show less
(I couldn't help wondering if they were stories without any copyright hindrances).
To start with, the blurb on the CD pack of 4 CDs says that there are 10 stories, but there are only 8.
I have found the original edition containing 10 stories here.
The only "modern" authors are Colin Dexter and Muriel Spark, and my listening companion remarked how old fashioned some of the other stories felt.
The stories show more do introduce detectives such as Edgar Wallace's J.G. Reeder and Sax Rhomer's Morris Klaw, whom modern readers would not be familiar with. But to bill these particular eight stories as "some of the best crime fiction ever written" is rather misleading.
From an audio point of view, there was a bit of variability in volume level and recording quality, which was annoying.
The Father Brown story, Chesterton's The Man in the Passage was probably the cleverest, but I think I enjoyed the crispness of Chimes by Muriel Spark the best. show less
A good selection of short mysteries with outstanding narration by Edward Hardwicke. My favourite stories were The Dying Detective by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and The Burglar by Colin Dexter.
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 8
- Also by
- 24
- Members
- 29
- Popularity
- #460,289
- Rating
- 4.0
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 14


