The Fourth Plague

Last updated

The Fourth Plague
The Fourth Plague.jpg
Author Edgar Wallace
Country United Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
GenreThriller
Publication date
1913
Media typePrint

The Fourth Plague is a 1913 thriller novel by British writer Edgar Wallace.

Contents

Plot synopsis

An Italian criminal organisation, The Red Hand, threaten to release a deadly plague on Britain if their financial demands are not met. [1]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Edgar Wallace</span> British writer

Richard Horatio Edgar Wallace was a British writer.

<i>The Four Just Men</i> (novel) Book by Edgar Wallace

The Four Just Men is a detective thriller published in 1905 by the British writer Edgar Wallace. The eponymous "Just Men" appear in several sequels.

Chick is a 1928 British silent drama film directed by A. V. Bramble and starring Bramwell Fletcher, Trilby Clark and Chili Bouchier. The film was made at Islington Studios by British Lion. It was based on the 1923 novel of the same title by Edgar Wallace. It was remade in 1936 starring Sydney Howard in the title role.

Bryan Edgar Wallace (1904–1971) was a British writer. The son of the writer Edgar Wallace, Bryan was also a writer of crime and mystery novels which were very similar in style to those of his father. He was named after the American politician William Jennings Bryan who his father encountered during a trip to North America.

The Squeaker is a 1930 British mystery crime film directed by Edgar Wallace and starring Percy Marmont, Anne Grey and Gordon Harker.

<i>Angel Esquire</i> (novel) 1908 crime mystery novel

Angel Esquire is a 1908 crime mystery novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. The wealthy owner of a gambling establishment leaves his money to whichever of his potential heirs can solve a complex puzzle. The title comes from the Scotland Yard detective Christopher Angel, who becomes involved with the case.

<i>The Man Who Bought London</i> (novel) 1915 novel

The Man Who Bought London is a 1915 crime novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. It was originally published as a magazine serialisation.

<i>The Melody of Death</i> 1915 novel by Edgar Wallace

The Melody of Death is a 1915 crime novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. Believing that he is suffering from a fatal illness a newly-married man begins to commit a series of crimes to make sure his wife will be provided for after his death.

The Tomb of Ts'in is a 1916 adventure novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. Some passages of the plot appear to copy word-for-word his earlier story Captain Tatham (1909). It is suggested that Wallace's embarrassment about recycling his work led to buying up most of the copies later, although the shortage of available copies may have to do with the fact that very few were originally printed by the publishers Ward Lock due to wartime shortages.

An African Millionaire is a 1904 play by the British writer Edgar Wallace, then a journalist working for the Daily Mail.

<i>Grey Timothy</i> 1913 novel

Grey Timothy is a 1913 sports thriller novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. Brian Pallard, an Australian gambler arrives in Britain clashes with a rival English aristocrat at the racetrack.

<i>Private Selby</i> 1912 novel by Edgar Wallace

Private Selby is a 1912 thriller novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. It was one of a number of books and plays written before the First World War about the dangers of a future German invasion of Britain. The hero Dick Selby had first appeared in a serial in the Sunday Journal in 1909 and was modelled on Wallace himself.

<i>Those Folk of Bulboro</i> 1918 novel by Edgar Wallace

Those Folk of Bulboro is a 1918 novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. It is likely it was written before the First World War, possibly even as early as 1908, and that Wallace produced the old manuscript to fulfil his contract with his publishers Ward Lock.

<i>Barbara on Her Own</i> 1926 novel

Barbara on Her Own is a 1926 mystery novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace.

<i>Captain Tatham of Tatham Island</i> 1909 novel by Edgar Wallace

Captain Tatham of Tatham Island, sometimes shortened to Captain Tatham, is a 1909 adventure novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. It is not told in a straight linear narrative, as with most Wallace novels, but instead consists of a series of witness statements by various characters involved. In subsequent rereleases its title was changed first to The Island of Galloping Gold and then Eve's Island.

<i>The Nine Bears</i> 1910 novel by Edgar Wallace

The Nine Bears is a 1910 British thriller novel by Edgar Wallace. It was originally written in serial form before being published as a novel. After signing a contract with American firm Dodd Mead, Wallace provided them with what effectively an extended version of this story with the villain's name changed to Poltavo, which was published by them as The Other Man. It was the first in a series of books featuring Wallace's fictional Scotland Yard detective Elk, whose rank varies during the series. It is also known by the alternative title The Cheaters.

<i>The Secret House</i> 1917 novel by Edgar Wallace

The Secret House is a 1917 thriller novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. It featured the return of several characters who had appeared in his earlier work The Nine Bears.

Jack O'Judgment is a 1920 thriller novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. It features a vigilante who takes action against a gang of blackmailers, using a mysterious identity and leaving the Jack of Clubs as a calling card.

<i>The Daffodil Mystery</i> 1920 novel

The Daffodil Mystery is a 1920 thriller novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. It features the detective Jack Tarling and his Chinese assistant Ling Chu.

<i>Mr. Justice Maxell</i> 1922 novel by Edgar Wallace

Mr. Justice Maxell is a 1922 thriller novel by the British writer Edgar Wallace. Like several of his books it is partly set in Morocco, where Wallace had previously worked as journalist.

References

  1. Clark p.131

Sources