Kryminał
Helena Sekuła
Pierwsza, wydana w 1962 roku, książka popularnej autorki kryminałów. Potem napisała ich jeszcze ponad dwadzieścia. Jednak to właśnie „Tęczowy cocktail” jest uważany przez fanów milicyjnych kryminałów za jedną z jej najlepszych powieści! I słusznie, bowiem ta klasyczna, świetnie napisana pozycja, spełnia wszelkie wymogi jakie powinien spełniać dobry kryminał i, w ogólności, dobra powieść. Mamy tu solidnie zagmatwaną intrygę – ale nie na tyle, aby czytelnik się w niej zgubił. Doskonale przedstawioną pracę stróżów prawa (milicjantów), którzy niejednokrotnie stosują nieszablonowe metody śledcze w tym prowokację i infiltrację środowisk przestępczych przez zakamuflowanych agentów i agentki. Zaskakujące zwroty akcji. Intrygujące zagadki. Galerię pięknych, tajemniczych kobiet. Brutalnych, zdecydowanych na wszystko mężczyzn. Broń krótką i maszynową. Narkotyki. Drogocenne szmaragdy, złote sztabki, dolary. Solidną dawkę erotyki. Interesujące realia wczesnego PRL-u. A wszystko to przedstawione w sposób literacko wybitny – przez co dobrze się czyta. Czego chcieć więcej?! Jest to książka – widmo, książka – rarytas, gdyż w momencie wydania jej wznowienia w formie e-booka (październik 2021 r.) nie można jej było kupić w żadnej księgarni, antykwariacie czy na Allegro, ani nawet wypożyczyć w którejś z bibliotek publicznych! Pierwsze, drukowane wydanie „Tęczowego cocktailu” zostało opublikowane przez wydawnictwo Iskry w serii „Klub Srebrnego Klucza” w roku 1962 w nakładzie 30250 egzemplarzy. Fabuła: Na terenie Polski działa bardzo dobrze zorganizowana szajka przemytnicza. Major Andrzej Korosz z Warszawy dostaje polecenie od swojego szefa pułkownika Henryka Lisa rozpracowania jej. Akcja dostaje kryptonim „Atlas”. Zostają wyodrębnione miasta w których koncentruje się przemyt, są to: Warszawa, Gdańsk, Poznań, Katowice, Kraków i Wrocław. Służba wywiadowcza po kilku miesiącach pracy w końcu typuje 5 osób do obserwacji. Jedną z nich jest Jan Majerski z Poznania. Po kilku miesiącach obserwacji, nagle znika i parę dni później milicja znajduję go martwego – został wypchnięty z pociągu (o morderstwie świadczy obcy naskórek pod paznokciami zamordowanego). Przy sobie miał sfałszowane dokumenty, szmaragdy i zapisany w kalendarzu numer: 4789621, którego służby nie mogą przypisać do żadnego nr. telefonu polskiego ani zagranicznego. Tknięty przeczuciem Korosz porównuje pomiary czaszki denata ze starymi zdjęciami Majerskiego. Okazuje się, że... Więcej oczywiście nie możemy zdradzić. (autorką tego akapitu jest Maria Hakenberg) HELENA SEKUŁA (1927–2020) to jedna z najlepszych polskich pisarek powieści kryminalnych, których napisała ponad dwadzieścia. Jej twórczość cechuje świetny, sugestywny styl pisarski, różnorodność i pogłębione portrety psychologiczne bohaterów, wnikliwa obserwacja obyczajowa, dbałość o realia i niebanalne poczucie humoru. W latach 50-tych i 60-tych XX wieku Helena Sekuła pracowała jako referent prasowy Komendy Głównej Milicji Obywatelskiej (dosłużyła się tam aż stopnia porucznika!), przez co przedstawiony w jej powieściach sposób pracy milicji i obraz świata przestępczego zyskują na wiarygodności. Jej powieści rozgrywają się w czasach PRL-u przez co stanową interesujący dokument tamtej epoki. Projekt okładki: Marcin Labus
Anna Katharine Green
That Affair Next Door focuses on a mysterious murder that has occurred in a quiet neighborhood, incidentally in the house next door to the home of the curious middle-aged amateur sleuth Miss Butterworth. One night around midnight Miss Butterworth sees a man and woman enter the Van Burnam mansion, which is supposed to be empty. The man leaves soon after, but the woman does not. On the following day, Miss Butterworth and a policeman find the body of a woman crushed to death under a cabinet in the parlor. There are way too many coincidences to be realistic, but the competitive sleuthing of Miss Butterworth and Detective Gryce keep the story moving along with seemingly definitive evidence pulling the reader to believe one person after another must be the actual murderer.
Edgar Wallace
Carfew was an erratic genius, with a horror of anything that had the appearance of discipline, order, or conventional method. So it was with some luck that there was a train disaster while he was working in the newspaper office of The Megaphone. He was dispatched to the scene and came back triumphant: The Spaniard is a fake! shouted Carfew. He had forgotten all about the railway accident. Shortly thereafter, so would his editor. The Admirable Carfew is a collection of loosely linked short stories. The slowly developing fortunes of a young entrepreneur, trying his hand at various deals, from stock dealing to theatre ownership and just managing to scrap through.
Edgar Wallace
The hero, the discharged Army Captain Reginald Hex, was the prototype for Anthony Newland, whose adventures were related several years later in The Brigand (Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1927). The first two Hex stories were revised and published as Anthony Newland stories in that collection under the titles Buried Treasure and A Contribution to Charity. The stories are adventurous and well written but definitely a product of their time and place. Edgar Wallace was a British author who is best known for creating King Kong. Wallace was a very prolific writer despite his sudden death at age 56. In total Wallace is credited with over 170 novels, almost 1,000 short stories, and 18 stage plays. Wallaces works have been turned into well over 100 films.
Edgar Wallace
The hapless Heine is trying very hard to be a good German spy in Great Britain during WWI but luck and circumstance are not with him. Every adventure turns out poorly for our dear spy. This collection of stories of Edgar Wallace about Heine was published during WWI and should be taken lightly by readers some may see it as a piece of anti-German propaganda, with Heine as a bit of a hopeless idiot. But the stories are also entertaining and should be read as such. Although these stories of German spy Heine are all linked and follow on from each other it is still very much a short story collection rather than a novel.
Frank L. Packard
Wealthy millionaire by day, at night Jimmie Dale put on a costume and becomes The Grey Seal, daredevil safe cracker and footpad he never takes a thing, but leaves behind his mark, a grey seal of paper to mark his conquest. He was just doing it for the sheer deviltry of it at first, but when a woman catches him she blackmails him to war on certain crime organizations. Frank Packards Gray Seal character first appeared in print in 1914. In some ways he was inspired by earlier Edwardian adventurers like A.J Raffles, the Scarlet Pimpernel, and Arsene Lupin, but Packard blended those borrowed elements into an entirely new concept. Dales adventures first appeared in Peoples Magazine and then were collected into several novels.
The Adventures of Kirby ODonnell
Robert E. Howard
One of Robert E. Howards lesser known fictional characters, Kirby ODonnell is an American treasure hunter in early-twentieth century Afghanistan disguised as a Kurdish merchant, Ali el Ghazi. Ali el Ghazi is a master of edged weapons, fiercely intelligent, tigerishly quick, and a merciless killer when threatened. Kirby ODonnell is similar to another of Howards characters, El Borak, in many ways. However, ODonnell seeks hidden treasures in all of his stories (Swords of Shahrazar, The Treasures of Tartary, The Curse of the Crimson God) while El Borak is more concerned with his own form of justice and stability in Afghanistan. There are betrayals, vicious swordfights, hot pursuits through brutally harsh Himalayan terrain, a hidden treasure and enough spilled entrails to satisfy the most discerning Howard fan.
The Adventures of Martin Hewitt
Arthur Morrison
Who else could have so quickly connected a partial sheet of music wrapped around a rock and tossed through a sitting room window with an infamous decades-old robbery? Would anyone else have taken seriously the fears of an eccentric old woman who swore thieves were after her most prized possession: a snuffbox fashioned from the actual wood of Noahs Ark? Englands greatest crime-solver Martin Hewitt uses his superior intellect and genial charm to unmask thieves, murderers, and dangerous fanatics. The Adventures of Martin Hewitt stories are well written with the usual detective story tropes a sidekick narrator, baffled police, all the clues within the narrative, the announcement followed by the detective explaining his brilliance.
The Adventures of Mr. Joseph P. Gray
E. Phillips Oppenheim
Joseph P. Cray is an American manufacturer who has just completed a year serving coffee to the troops in France during World War 1. He is motivated by good will, and also to escape his American second wife who is the head of a temperance organization. With sybaritic glee, he returns to London, dons civilian garb, and enjoys his first cocktail. He is soon joined by his daughter, the beautiful Lady Sara Sittingbourne, who lives in London. Together the two seek adventure in the form of crimes foiled, jewels recovered, spies uncovered, and plots smashed. Edward Phillips Oppenheim was an English novelist, in his lifetime a major and successful writer of genre fiction including thrillers.
The Adventures of Romney Pringle
Cliffford Ashdown
From the author of the Thorndyke detective stories. The stories follow the adventures of Romney Pringle, a gentleman con man, thief and master of disguiseswho is not above using his keen observation and wits to track down other criminals. These twelve tales conjure up the authentic atmosphere of Victorian London and offer a thrilling alternative to the ascetic honesty of Sherlock Holmes!
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
Arthur Conan Doyle
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes - a collection of short stories by Arthur Conan Doyle, a British writer and medical doctor. He created the characters of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson. The Sherlock Holmes stories are considered milestones in the field of crime fiction. This collection of stories consists of: A Scandal in Bohemia The Red-Headed League A Case of Identity The Boscombe Valley Mystery The Five Orange Pips The Man with the Twisted Lip The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle The Adventure of the Speckled Band The Adventure of the Engineer's Thumb The Adventure of the Noble Bachelor The Adventure of the Beryl Coronet The Adventure of the Copper Beeches
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. Illustrated Edition
Arthur Conan Doyle
Illustrated edition with original illustrations by Sidney Edward Paget, a famous British illustrator, best known for his illustrations that accompanied Arthur Conan Doyles Sherlock Holmes stories in The Strand magazine. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes is a collection of twelve short stories by Arthur Conan Doyle, featuring his fictional detective Sherlock Holmes. All of the stories are told in a first-person narrative from the point of view of Dr. John H. Watson, Holmes friend, assistant and sometime flatmate.
The Adventures of Tyler Tatlock, Private Detective
Dick Donovan
Dick Donovans detective was considered a great rival to Holmes. For a time his detective stories were as popular as those of Arthur Conan Doyle. The Adventures of Tyler Tatlock, Private Detective is a thrilling collection of mystery and adventure tales (21 in all) including The Queensferry Mystery in which a series of remarkable house burglaries take place during the winter months in Edinburgh. This series also includes Sherlockian titles such as The Sign of the Yellow Star, The Band of Three and The Clue of the Silver Jug.
Earl Derr Biggers
Geoffrey West falls in love at first sight with a girl in a hotel breakfasting with her father. Theyre all Americans, but the scene is London on the eve of the Great War. Both Geoffrey and his ladylove Marian are reading the personals (The Agony Column) of the Daily Mail. Later that day he has an idea to place an ad to catch her attention, and vows to send her a letter each day for a week to win her heart. Each letter becomes more interesting than the previous because West finds himself entangled in a murder mystery with new twists each day. To say more about what transpires would spoil the fun. The lightness of the story contrasts interestingly with the grim mood of England as Germany mobilizes.
The Almost Perfect Murder. A Case Book of Madame Storey
Hulbert Footner
Beyond the City explores the relationships between the residents of three adjoining homes. The cast of characters includes a widowed doctor with two daughters, a retired admiral with a wife and son, and a feminist living with her nephew. Destiny brings these three peculiar households together in the placid English countryside. The desire for money and romance drive these Victorians beyond the natural boundaries of their middle-class lives. As the web of lust and deceit draws these accidental neighbors ever closer, a financial scandal befalls one of them. An outside rank pirate is linked somehow to one of the neighbors. Who could it be? In this work, Conan Doyle exhibits the practiced subtlety and complexity for which he has become so well known.
E. Phillips Oppenheim
This is a very early novel by E. Phillips Oppenheim from 1897. The wealthy and bored Lord Hildyard, Marquis of Esholt, is on a yachting tour with a group of friends, including his kept lover, Pauline Owston. When Hildyard spies an apparently uninhabited island, he slips off the ship in search of adventure. In the middle of the night, he hears wonderful violin music and finds a young and beautiful girl, Bertha, playing in the forest. She is accompanied by a cruel and misshapen dwarf. Enchanted, Hildyard stays on the island, where he finds an old college chum, Stanley Owston, the estranged husband of the actress, who is the guardian of the girl, and the owner of the island. The adventures are continuing...