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The famous sleuth comes out of retirement to help his father hunt
down a New York City serial killer: "Marvelous . . . one of his
best" (Classic Mysteries). In the dog days of August, it is no
surprise to see New Yorkers perspire. But this summer, a killer
called the Cat gives the city a new reason to sweat. He selects his
victims seemingly at random and strangles them, then escapes
without leaving a clue. As the death toll climbs, and the press
whips the public into horrified frenzy, Gotham teeters on the edge
of anarchy. Ellery Queen, the brilliant amateur sleuth, has gone
into retirement when the Cat begins to kill. As his father, a
seasoned homicide detective, leads the investigation into the
murder, Ellery tries to avoid getting involved. But as the body
count rises, he can no longer resist the urge to hunt. The Queens
are known for their curiosity--and everyone knows how curiosity can
affect a cat.
Death Valley lives up to its name when a murder draws Ellery Queen
into the strange practices of a religious cult. It's 1943, the war
is raging, and sleuthing scribe Ellery Queen wants to do his bit.
After a tortuous cross-country drive, he takes a job writing
scripts for a Hollywood propaganda house--twelve hours a day of
hack work that quickly turns his mind to jelly. After a few weeks,
he is so worn down that he can type nothing but gibberish, and he
decides to drive home. The trouble starts as soon as he reaches the
desert. His ancient roadster breaks down on the edge of Death
Valley. Wandering in search of help, he is saved by a man known as
the Teacher, who takes him to an oasis called Quenan. Here, Queen
finds a bizarre, reclusive cult that seems to have come straight
out of the ancient past. A murder has been committed in the desert,
and the Quenanites plan on delivering some Old Testament justice.
Queen is just the detective they've been waiting for.
Based on the Sherlock Holmes film: Ellery Queen matches wits with
the Baker Street sleuth to unmask Jack the Ripper. Ellery Queen is
struggling over his latest book when a friend brings him a mystery.
It is a journal, written by a Victorian doctor, of reports on the
remarkable adventures of his close friend, a brilliant detective
named Sherlock Holmes. Queen's surprise turns to amazement as he
turns its pages and discovers the lost story of Sherlock Holmes's
greatest case: the pursuit of Jack the Ripper. From the brothels
and back alleys of fog-choked Whitechapel to the manor of one of
England's greatest families, Holmes and Dr. Watson chase history's
most fearsome killer. But it will take the brilliance of Ellery
Queen to solve the case once and for all. Based on the Sherlock
Holmes film A Study in Terror, this collaboration between two of
the world's greatest detectives is one of the most original mystery
novels of all time.
Called to an urgent meeting at a mysterious shack in the middle of
nowhere, attorney Bill Angell finds his brother-in-law, traveling
salesman Joe Wilson, stabbed. With Joe's dying breath, he manages
to convey that his murderer was a veiled woman. Was it the
wild-eyed woman who had sped past Bill on his way up the dark road
to the shack? To help him unravel the mystery, Bill calls on his
old friend Ellery Queen. But first Queen will have to unravel the
victim's double life - starting with the shack where he's been
found dead, smack dab between two very different worlds.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
A stylish puzzle mystery from the author who "took the intellectual
game that was the formal detective novel to greater heights than
any American writer" (The Weekly Standard). The windows of French's
department store are one of New York's great attractions.
Year-round, their displays show off the finest in fashion, art, and
home decor, and tourists and locals alike make a point of stopping
to see what's on offer. One afternoon, as the board debates a
merger upstairs, a salesgirl begins a demonstration in one of the
windows, showing off French's new Murphy bed. A crowd gathers to
watch the bed lower from the wall after a single touch of a button.
But as the bed opens, people run screaming. Out tumbles a
woman-crumpled, bloody, and dead. The victim was Mrs. French, wife
of the company president, and finding her killer will turn this
esteemed store upside down. Only one detective has the soft touch
necessary-debonair intellectual Ellery Queen. As Queen and his
police inspector father dig into French's secrets, they find their
killer is more serious than any window shopper.
When every last one of the Ohippi hydro-electric power plants are
destroyed by flood, Rhys Jardin is one of many who loses
everything. But somehow Jardin's longtime partner, finance magnate
Solly Spaeth, manages to come out of it wealthier than before,
thanks to a brilliant-if-underhanded move to sell off his shares
before disaster struck. Spaeth has more than enough money to
rebuild the plants, but why should he, with the law on his side?
The only problem is that Spaeth's son Walter, an idealistic
journalist, is in love with Jardin's daughter. When he pleads for
his father's mercy, he finds himself disinherited from the will.
Walter enlists the help of Ellery Queen, a mystery author in town
to try his hand at screenwriting for Hollywood, to secretly buy
back the auctioned Jardin-family belongings on their behalf. But
before Queen can walk away, Solly Spaeth turns up dead. Now
embroiled in a real-life mystery, Queen must figure out a way to
weed through the suspects, all the while proving himself a player
in Hollywood. Unfortunately for Queen, Spaeth's extreme wealth can
only be matched by the number of his enemies. From his first
appearance in print in 1929, Ellery Queen became one of America's
most famous and beloved fictional detectives. Over the course of
nearly half a century, Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee, the duo
writing team known as Ellery Queen, won the prestigious Edgar Award
multiple times, and their contributions to the mystery genre were
recognized with a Grand Master Award, the highest honor bestowed by
the Mystery Writers of America. Their fair-play mysteries won over
fans due to their intricate puzzles that challenged the reader to
solve the mystery alongside the brilliant detective. Queen's
stories were among the first to dominate the earliest days of
radio, film, and television. Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, which
the writers founded and edited, became the world's most influential
and acclaimed crime fiction magazine.
The "intensely logical" master sleuth discovers a crowded coffin in
one of his earliest and most puzzling cases (The New York Times).
The scion of a famous New York art-dealing family, Georg Khalkis
spent his final years housebound with blindness until he died of a
heart attack. After his funeral, his will mysteriously vanishes.
Following a thorough search, Inspector Richard Queen's son, Ellery,
suggests checking the coffin, where they discover not one, but two
corpses. When the second body is identified as an ex-convict, it
becomes clear they have a murder case on their hands with links to
the art world and a da Vinci forgery. It's up to young Ellery Queen
to solve the case in "a lively and well-constructed yarn containing
unusual setting, ingenuity of plot, a surprise solution and
legitimate use of the analytico-deductive method" (New York Herald
Tribune Book Review).
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