Picture of author.

Nicholas Blake (1) (1904–1972)

Author of The Beast Must Die

For other authors named Nicholas Blake, see the disambiguation page.

Nicholas Blake (1) has been aliased into C. Day Lewis.

38+ Works 3,083 Members 103 Reviews 3 Favorited

Series

Works by Nicholas Blake

Works have been aliased into C. Day Lewis.

The Beast Must Die (1938) 445 copies
A Question of Proof (1935) 244 copies
Thou Shell of Death (1936) 207 copies
End of Chapter (1957) 186 copies
Smiler with the Knife (1939) 158 copies
Minute for Murder (1947) 155 copies
Head of a Traveller (1949) 146 copies
The Widow's Cruise (1959) 143 copies
The Worm of Death (1961) 142 copies
There's Trouble Brewing (1937) 123 copies
The Dreadful Hollow (1953) 120 copies
The Sad Variety (1964) 109 copies
The Whisper in the Gloom (1954) 106 copies
The Private Wound (1968) 105 copies

Associated Works

Works have been aliased into C. Day Lewis.

English Country House Murders (1989) — Contributor — 489 copies
The Oxford Book of English Detective Stories (1990) — Contributor — 400 copies
Silent Nights: Christmas Mysteries (2015) — Contributor — 230 copies
Murder by the Book: Mysteries for Bibliophiles (2021) — Contributor — 175 copies
Murder at the Manor: Country House Mysteries (2016) — Contributor — 173 copies
Bodies from the Library (2018) — Contributor — 124 copies
Great Irish Detective Stories (1993) — Contributor — 89 copies
The Long Arm of the Law (2017) — Contributor — 85 copies
Fifty Best Mysteries (1991) — Contributor — 72 copies
A Century of British Mystery and Suspense (2000) — Contributor — 56 copies
Murder at Christmas (2019) — Contributor — 54 copies
Bodies from the Library 3 (2020) — Contributor — 42 copies
Detection Medley (1939) — Contributor — 7 copies
Murder for the Millions (1946) — Contributor — 7 copies
Great Stories of Detection (1960) — Contributor — 2 copies
A Magnum of Mysteries (1963) — Contributor — 2 copies
Club del Misterio, volum 9 (1982) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Day Lewis, Cecil
Birthdate
1904
Gender
male
Nationality
United Kingdom
Short biography
Nicholas Blake was the pen name of Cecil Day-Lewis, or C. Day Lewis, born in Ballintubbert, County Laois, Ireland, to Anglo-Irish parents. His father Frank Day-Lewis was a clergyman of the Church of Ireland. After 1906, following the death of his mother Kathleen when he was two years old, he was brought up in England by his father, spending summer holidays with relatives back in County Wexford. He was educated at Sherborne School in Dorset and then read classics (nicknamed "Greats") at Wadham College, Oxford, where he became a member of the circle of writers around W.H. Auden. While still a student, he published his first collection of poems. After graduating in 1927, he worked as a schoolteacher and to supplement his income, he wrote his first detective novel A Question of Proof, published in 1935 under the name Nicholas Blake. As Blake, he wrote 19 more crime novels, all but four of which featured Nigel Strangeways. Nicholas Blake became one of the UK's most popular detective novelists, and these books have remained in print. During World War II, he worked as a publications editor in the Ministry of Information, which he used as the basis for the Ministry of Morale in his novel Minute for Murder (1947). After the war, he joined the publishers Chatto & Windus as an editor and director before becoming a professor of Poetry at Cambridge and Oxford. He was appointed poet laureate of England in 1968.

Members

Reviews

An unpopular boy is killed on a school sports day. One of the teachers was seen kissing the principal's wife near that spot and they become the prime suspects. The teacher brings in his friend Nigel Strangeways to investigate. Nigel is able to connect with the staff and students in a way that the police cannot and is therefore better able to gather information. His interactions with the students were fun.

The book was interesting until the point towards the end where Nigel claimed to have identified the murderer but wouldn't reveal who it was. He keeps asking the police for one more day before he tells them what he knows because he doesn't have any proof. And even after a second murder takes place the police keep giving in to his one more day request. And the reason for not confronting the murderer with the proof when he did get it finally seemed rather thin.

But overall a nice read.
… (more)
 
Flagged
bookworm3091 | 13 other reviews | Apr 30, 2024 |
Nigel Strangeway's is back in another with another oddly worldy english detective novel.
Some wonderfully colourful characters set in a golden era of crime detection.
A great different take on a crime procedurals.
 
Flagged
DebTat2 | 12 other reviews | Oct 13, 2023 |
wherein he meets Georgia Cavendish - oooh la la
 
Flagged
Overgaard | 12 other reviews | Jul 23, 2023 |
Maybe even 3½ stars. This is perhaps my very favorite type of mystery (British mystery of the 1930s) but I found Nigel Strangeways (the main character) a little more annoying than I had in other Blake mysteries. The mystery itself, set in a beer brewery, was fine.
 
Flagged
leslie.98 | 4 other reviews | Jun 27, 2023 |

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Statistics

Works
38
Also by
19
Members
3,083
Popularity
#8,283
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
103
ISBNs
246
Languages
11
Favorited
3

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