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Unexpected Night (1940)

par Elizabeth Daly

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Séries: Henry Gamadge (1)

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An antiquarian book dealer spends his vacation investigating murder in this series opener from Agatha Christie's favorite American author. New York handwriting and rare book expert-and a gentleman sleuth-Henry Gamadge is vacationing in coastal Maine when the police there need his help. It's a strange case involving a seemingly natural death, a large inheritance, a mysterious nighttime rendezvous, and a troupe of summer stock actors who start dying off. Something is clearly afoot, but nothing quite seems to fit. With an eye for frauds, Gamadge is just what the local detective needs to throw the book at a killer ...… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 40 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 10 (suivant | tout afficher)
Perfect misdirection.Loved it. ( )
  EricaObey | Jul 26, 2023 |
between 2.5 and 3 stars. i definitely didn't see that ending/solution coming, not by a mile. this was a very well done mystery and a nicely hidden solution. that part was really fun. but i felt very removed from it all, and so not as engaged in the action as i'd like to have been. what was harder for me was picturing almost any of what was happening at any important moment, and (this is all on me) but for some reason i had trouble keeping track of the people when sometimes they were referred to by their last names and sometimes by their first names. so that made it harder for me to follow, but the mystery here really is great. what a trick ending. ( )
  overlycriticalelisa | Apr 28, 2023 |
A fun read. Really has the flavor of the classic British cozy mysteries. Good detective. Clever solution. I look forward to finding more Elizabeth Daly. ( )
  njcur | Mar 21, 2023 |
Henry Gamadge came to the seaside resort for a little golf and relaxation. Instead, he found himself involved in a suspicious death of a young man who had come into his inheritance just shortly before his death. Too bad for the young man but it may be good for one branch of the family. That fortune may pass to them.

How did the young invalided man wind up at the base of a cliff? Who among the legatees could have caused his death? A person who has been forced to live a very sheltered life, on the brink of his possible independence is suddenly denied it. Has his protective family been waiting for this moment?

Gamadge may be a known authority on rare manuscripts, but he is also known for his amateur sleuthing. This is a case that puts those talents to the test.

Elizabeth Daly is one of the Golden Age writers and does a good job of creating puzzles and their solutions. She only wrote sixteen Gamadge books and I plan to read them all. She is up there with Christie and Sayers. ( )
  ChazziFrazz | Aug 5, 2022 |
This book was my first experience with Henry Gamadge, and I like it.
A good story (though there is a high body count), intriguing cast of characters (though I did resort to keeping a who's-who list), and a likable amateur detective (one character humorously considers Gamadge a suspect because Gamadge always seems to be there when there's a vital clue or action or conversation).
This, from late in the book, during a conversation between the family lawyer and Gamadge, when Gamadge says something that surprises Ormville, who thought they were on the same page in assessing suspects: Mr. Ormville sat back in his chair and contemplated Gamadge with the air of one who has stroked the house cat, and had his thumb bitten. ( )
  ReadMeAnother | Oct 18, 2021 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Daly, Elizabethauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Murray, James B.Concepteur de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé

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...eventful unexpected night,
Which finishes a row of plotting days,
Fulfilling their designs.

Death's Jest-Book; or The Fool's Tragedy
THOMAS LOVELL BEDDOES
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Pine trunks in a double row started out of the mist as the headlights caught them, opened to receive the car, passed like an endless screen, and vanished.
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Mr. Henry Gamadge, on the other hand, wore clothes of excellent material and cut; but he contrived, by sitting and walking in a careless and lopsided manner, to look presentable in nothing. He screwed his grey tweeds out of shape before he had worn them a week, he screwed his mouth to one side when he smiled, and he screwed his eyes up when he pondered. His eyes were greyish-green, his features blunt, and his hair mouse-coloured. People as a rule considered him a well-mannered, restful kind of young man; but if somebody happened to say something unusually outrageous or inane, he was wont to gaze upon the speaker in a wondering and somewhat disconcerting manner. (Chapter 1)
[When the state detective asks Gamadge what his business is:]

'It has no name. But if somebody wants to sell you a rare old pamphlet about Nell Gwyn, with Charles the Second's autograph on the flyleaf and marginal notes by Louis the Fourteenth, I'll perhaps be able to to tell you whether it was made later than 1900, and what part of Michigan it came from.'

'You make a living that way, Mr. Gamadge?'

'That would be telling. People pay me for doing it, though.' (Chapter 4)
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An antiquarian book dealer spends his vacation investigating murder in this series opener from Agatha Christie's favorite American author. New York handwriting and rare book expert-and a gentleman sleuth-Henry Gamadge is vacationing in coastal Maine when the police there need his help. It's a strange case involving a seemingly natural death, a large inheritance, a mysterious nighttime rendezvous, and a troupe of summer stock actors who start dying off. Something is clearly afoot, but nothing quite seems to fit. With an eye for frauds, Gamadge is just what the local detective needs to throw the book at a killer ...

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