Author | Ernest Bramah |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Series | Max Carrados |
Genre | Thriller |
Publisher | Cassell |
Publication date | 1934 |
Media type | |
Preceded by | Max Carrados Mysteries |
The Bravo of London is a 1934 mystery thriller novel by the British writer Ernest Bramah. It featured his most celebrated character the blind detective Max Carrados. It was the first and only full-length novel to feature Carrados, who usually appeared in short stories. [1]
In a later review David Langford described it as "a disappointing performance whose most memorable section turns out to be a recycling of one of the short stories". [2] Another modern commentator observed that only in this novel "did Bramah's invention flag, though Joolby, a criminal antique dealer, makes for a memorable villain". [3]
Ernest Bramah, the pseudonym of Ernest Brammah Smith, was an English author. He published 21 books and numerous short stories and features. His humorous works were often ranked with Jerome K. Jerome and W. W. Jacobs, his detective stories with Conan Doyle, his politico-science fiction with H. G. Wells, and his supernatural stories with Algernon Blackwood. George Orwell acknowledged that Bramah's book What Might Have Been influenced his Nineteen Eighty-Four. Bramah created the characters Kai Lung and Max Carrados.
Max Carrados is a fictional blind detective in a series of mystery stories and books by Ernest Bramah, first published in 1914.
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Trial and Error is a 1937 mystery detective novel by the British writer Anthony Berkeley. It was a loose sequel to the 1929 novel The Piccadilly Murder, featuring two of the characters from the earlier work the unprepossessing but shrewd Ambrose Chitterwick and Chief Inspector Moresby of Scotland Yard. Berkeley was a prominent author of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction, known for his inverted detective stories.
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