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Why must the festive dinner in the Hirschen Inn be interrupted? A
murder puts an end to the wedding celebration of Studer's daughter.
A man is found with a sharpened bicycle spoke embedded in his back,
and a suspect is quickly arrested - a bit too quickly, thinks
Studer. Property speculation, usury and betrayed love find their
way into this tightly written mystery novel that calls on Studer's
intuitive, often absurd, yet efficient police methods. "The Spoke",
a European crime classic, was first published in 1937. It has been
translated into six languages. This is its first publication in
English.
Studer investigates when the director vanishes and a child murderer
escapes from an insane asylum in Bern, an environment Glauser knew
all too well from personal experience. Set in the 1920s, the novel
explores the no-man's-land between reason and madness where Matto,
the spirit of insanity, reigns. Dubions psychological theories and
therapies abound and the asylum darkly mirrors the world outside.
When two women are "accidently" killed by gas leaks, Sergeant
Studer investigates the thinly disguised double murder in Bern and
Basel. The trail leads to a geologist dead from a tropical fever in
a Moroccan Foreign Legion post and a murky oil deal involving
rapacious politicians and their henchmen. With the help of a
hashish-induced dream and the common sense of his stay-at-home
wife, Studer solves the multiple riddles on offer. But assigning
guilt remains an elusive affair. "Fever", a European crime classic,
was first published in 1936. It has been translated into four
languages. This is its first publication in English and the third
in the "Sergeant Studer" series published by Bitter Lemon Press.
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The Chinaman (Paperback)
Mike Mitchell; Fredrich Glauser
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R284
R259
Discovery Miles 2 590
Save R25 (9%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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When, in later years, Sergeant Studer told the story of the
Chinaman, he also called it the story of the three places as the
case unfolded in a country inn, in a poorhouse and in a
horticultural college, all in Pfrundisberg, a Swiss village - three
places but also two murders. Anna Hungerlott, supposedly dead of a
gastric influenza, left behind handkerchiefs with traces of
arsenic. And one foggy November morning, the enigmatic James Farny,
nicknamed the Chinaman by Studer, was found lying on Anna's grave,
murdered with a single pistol shot to the heart that did not hole
his clothing. Did the fact that the poorhouse inmates had to
survive on watery cabbage soup while the Warden drank vintage wines
have anything to do with the murders? Perhaps. Studer must
reconstitute the Chinaman's story, a voyage through asylums, reform
schools and institutions for the destitute that, incidentally, were
an integral part of Glauser's short life.
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