The Innocent Flower

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The Innocent Flower
The Innocent Flower.jpg
1970 edition
Author Charlotte Armstrong
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesMacDougal Duff
GenreMystery
Publisher Coward-McCann
Publication date
1945
Media typePrint
Preceded by The Case of the Weird Sisters  

The Innocent Flower is a 1945 mystery novel by the American writer Charlotte Armstrong. [1] It is the third and final part of her trilogy featuring the amateur detective MacDougal Duff and was published in New York by Coward-McCann, an imprint of Putnam. [2] It was published in Britain under the alternative title Death Filled the Glass. After this trilogy, which was more in the style of the classic Golden Age story, she produced a stand-alone suspense novel The Unsuspected on the advice of her agents. [3]

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<i>Lay On, Mac Duff!</i> 1942 novel

Lay On, Mac Duff! is a 1942 mystery novel by the American writer Charlotte Armstrong. It was first published in New York by Coward-McCann, an imprint of Putnam. The first of a trilogy featuring amateur detective MacDougal Duff, it was followed by the The Case of the Weird Sisters (1943) and The Innocent Flower (1945). The title is a punning reference to both the protagonist's name and a line from William Shakespeare's Macbeth, with the following two titles in the trilogy also referring to the play. It was Armstrong's debut novel, following two Broadway plays that made no great impact.

The Case of the Weird Sisters is a 1943 mystery thriller novel by the American writer Charlotte Armstrong. It was first published in New York by Coward-McCann, an imprint of Putnam. It was the second in a trilogy featuring amateur detective MacDougal Duff, preceded by Lay On, Mac Duff! and followed by The Innocent Flower.

<i>A Dram of Poison</i> 1956 novel

A Dram of Poison is a 1956 mystery novel by the American author Charlotte Armstrong. It was first published in New York by Coward-McCann, an imprint of Putnam. The title is a line from William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. It was awarded an Edgar Award by the Mystery Writers of America. Although considered for screen adaptation, no film was ultimately produced.

References

  1. Cypert p.139
  2. Reilly p.43
  3. Cypert p.63-64

Bibliography