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Howard Pease (1) (1894–1974)

Author of Mystery at Thunderbolt House

For other authors named Howard Pease, see the disambiguation page.

22+ Works 524 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Howard Pease

Series

Works by Howard Pease

Mystery at Thunderbolt House (1944) 108 copies, 1 review
The Tattooed Man (1948) 54 copies, 1 review
The Jinx Ship (1980) 42 copies
The ship without a crew (1934) 35 copies
Shanghai Passage (1947) 34 copies, 1 review
Secret Cargo (1965) 27 copies
The Black Tanker (1968) 26 copies
Hurricane Weather (1936) 18 copies
Heart of Danger (1946) 16 copies
Bound for Singapore (1948) 14 copies
Wind In The Rigging (1951) 14 copies
Mystery on Telegraph Hill; (1961) 14 copies

Associated Works

Writing Books for Boys and Girls (1952) — Contributor, some editions — 5 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1894-09-06
Date of death
1974-04-14
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Stockton, California, USA
Associated Place (for map)
California, USA

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
The sea stories of Howard Pease were among the favorites of my boyhood. A combination of adventure at sea with mysteries. I just reread The Tattooed Man. Tod Moran a seventeen year old from Stockton CA goes to sea to find his brother who has not been heard from for some time. He meets a huge tattooed ship's cook who guides him through many dangers. First published in 1926 this was one of my father's favorites as well as mine. Set at a time when ships still were run by steam with firemen show more shoveling coal below decks it is full of exotic high adventure. Pease's books may not be found in too many school libraries today. The language of the 1920s includes some terms considered racist now ; characters like Tony the Wop and Squarehead Swede Jorgensen would not be used today nor should they be. Other ethnic slurs are heard too,While Pease's characters make racist statements he never portrayed nonwhites are evil or villains. The bad guys of all of his stories were white. show less
As a boy Howard Pease was one of my favorite authors. Most of his books are set on ships at sea. Mystery at Thunderbolt House is one of his few books with a land setting. The time is 1905 and 1906 and the place is San Francisco. The Allen family who live in Stockton CA have just inherited a mansion in San Francisco. Mysteries revolve around the questionable past of Mrs. Allen's uncle Edward Judson who left his house and contents to her. The protagonist Judson Allen, 17, inherits Uncle show more Edward's collection of valuable books. Why do books keep disappearing from the mansion's library and what was Uncle Edward's involvement with the Vigilantes. show less

Lists

Awards

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Associated Authors

Armstrong Sperry Illustrator
Mahlon Blaine Cover artist
Frank Dobias Illustrator
Charles Walker Cover artist

Statistics

Works
22
Also by
1
Members
524
Popularity
#47,449
Rating
4.2
Reviews
3
ISBNs
19
Languages
1

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