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Roger Bewlay presented one of the Yard's great unsolved mysteries. He had certainly killed three women, but left no traces of their bodies. The fourth time there had even been a witness. But just when the police were closing in he had vanished completely. Eleven years later, the actor Bruce Ransom receives a play about the murderer, sent by an unknown writer. His enthusiasm for it sends him off on an extraordinary venture, which soon brings Sir Henry Merrivale down to a Suffolk village for a show more spine-chilling finale. show lessTags
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Not by any means one of the author's best books, although it starts with an intriguing idea. A man called Roger Bewlay is a serial murderer, whose system usually involves marrying a woman for her money, after which she vanishes without trace. The problem for the police (apart from finding the man) is that they can't work out what he has done with the bodies. This has all happened some years before the book proper starts, and one of the central characters, an actor called Bruce Ransom, is sent a script about a killer who is obviously based on Bewlay. To test out the play's denouement, he goes to a country town and pretends to be the killer himself. The problem is that all too often the action depends on people behaving in a totally show more unbelievable manner - you find yourself asking "but when X was talking about Y, surely he would have mentioned Z?" This particularly applies to the ending, where one character is put in mortal danger while some others watch and do nothing about it. Probably recommendable to completists only. show less
Sir Heny Merrivale on the case of Roger Bewlay, who probably murdered 4 wives, then vanished --now a play about him has appeared, containing facts known only to Bewlay, the police, and one witness. As I recall, this is one of the better Merrivales as a mystery, though not as funny as some.
En septiembre de 1930, Angela Phipps, hija de un pastor protestante y beneficiaria de una pequeña, pero holgada herencia, conoció en la avenida costanera de Bournemouth a Roger Bewlay, hombre reposado y cortés; al cabo de dos semana se casaron. En 1932, Elizabeth Mosnar, rubia, flacucha, artística y desesperadamente sincera, conoció en un concierto, en el Queen´s Hall, a Roger Bowdoin; al cabo de un tiempo se casaron. En la primavera de 1933, Andrés Cooper, secretaria de un consultorio quiromántico en Oxford Street...
Nov 22, 2010Spanish
En septiembre de 1930, Angela Phipps, hija de un pastor protestante y beneficiaria de una pequeña pero holgada herencia, conoció en la avenida costanera de Bournemouth a Roger Bewlay, un hombre reposado y cortés. Al cabo de dos semanas se casaron. En 1932, Elizabeth Mosnar, rubia, flacucha, artística y desesperadamente sincera, conoció en un concierto, en el Queen's Hall, a Roger Bowdoin. Al cabo de un tiempo se casaron. En la primavera de 1933, Andrea Cooper, secretaria de un consultorio quiromántico en Oxfor Street...
Nov 23, 2022Spanish
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229+ Works 18,943 Members
John Dickson Carr, the master of locked room mysteries, was born in Uniontown, Pennsylvania, in 1906. He was educated at Haverford College and the Sorbonne in Paris. Carr is a prolific writer with more than 80 novels and collections of short stories to his credit. He began his writing career at the age of 26 with his first published novel, It show more Walks At Night. Some of his most popular works are The Three Coffins (1935), The Burning Coat (1937), and The Bride of Newgate (1951). Carr also collaborated with Adrian Doyle, the son of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in The Exploits of Sherlock Holmes (1954). Carr met his wife in 1932 and settled in England in 1933. He was drafted by the United States military in World War II, and was ordered to remain in England and work with the BBC. He lived in many cities throughout the world until 1967, when he permanently moved to Greenville, South Carolina. John Dickson Carr also wrote mystery novels under the name Carter Dickson. He died in Greenville in 1977. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- Kuolema astuu näyttämölle
- Original title
- My Late Wives
- Original publication date
- 1946
- People/Characters
- Sir Henry Merrivale; Roger Bewlay; Bruce Ransom; Humphrey Masters (Chief Inspector)
- Important places
- London, England, UK
- First words
- The track of a great murderer, moving deviously from victim to victim, can never be followed step by step or set down as a connected story.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)'Make-believe!' he said.
- Original language
- English
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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- Reviews
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- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 9
- ASINs
- 7




























































