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The Lost Gallows

A London Mystery

#3 in series

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Carr (1906-1977) is at the top of his game in this taut whodunit first published in 1931."—Publishers Weekly, Starred review

The British Library resurfaces an early gem from one of the great writers of the Golden Age of classic crime fiction.

As the thick, autumnal fog chokes the capital, within the fire-lit lounge of London's notorious Brimstone Club a bizarre tale is being spun for Inspector Bencolin and his friend Jeff Marle. A member of the club has been sent a model of a tiny gallows, and the word is that the folkloric hangman Jack Ketch has been stalking the streets for victims by night, his gibbet in tow.

The threat of this supposed bogeyman becomes thrillingly real when that same night Bencolin and Marle are almost run down by a limousine with a corpse behind the wheel. When an ominous message claims the car's passenger has been taken to the gallows at Ruination Street for hanging, the detective and his associate venture into the night to discover the truth behind the terrifying Ketch and a street which cannot be found on any map.

First published in 1931 at the outset of Carr's legendary career in crime writing, this atmospheric mystery boasts all of the twists, tension, and unforgettable scenes of a young master at work.

This British Library Crime Classics edition also includes the rare Inspector Bencolin short story "The Ends of Justice" and an Introduction by CWA Diamond Dagger-Award winning author Martin Edwards.

Also in the British Library Crime Classics:

Smallbone Deceased

The Body in the Dumb River

Blood on the Tracks

Surfeit of Suspects

Death Has Deep Roots

Checkmate to Murder

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    • Kirkus

      January 15, 2021
      In his second appearance, originally published in 1931, juge d'instruction M. Henri Bencolin, "the most dangerous man in Europe," bets his old friend Sir John Landervorne, retired assistant commissioner of Scotland Yard, that he can solve an impossible crime within 48 hours. Nezam El Moulk, an Egyptian long resident in London, may be wealthy and powerful, but he's scared stiff of whomever left a miniature gallows in his locked flat in the Brimstone Club and sent him notes signed Mr. Jack Ketch, the ancient British sobriquet for the hangman. Jack seems to have a special fondness for terrorizing the people around El Moulk, from young George Dallings, who's confronted with the gallows after wandering lost in the London fog, to Richard Smail, El Moulk's American bodyguard, who's spotted behind the wheel of his employer's otherwise empty car with his throat cut, to Colette Laverne, a friend of Dallings and El Moulk who vanishes soon after telling Bencolin's amanuensis, Jeff Marle, about a 10-year-old murder Jack seems bent on avenging. Even before El Moulk himself is spirited away to the nonexistent Ruination Street, the atmosphere is deliciously creepy, and Bencolin, who "find[s] 'people' eminently dull," does an impressive job of sorting out the evidence left behind by the dead. The appended 1927 story "The Ends of Justice" shows Bencolin and Landervorne puzzling over the impossible murder of Roger Darworth, whom Carr (1906-1977) must have liked enough to kill off again in even more baffling circumstances in The Plague Court Murders (1934). Blood! Thunder! Vengeance served cold!

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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