Results 17 - 24 of 142 results

The First Saint Omnibus. An Anthology of Saintly Adventures - Leslie Charteris

1939 - Hodder &, London - First Edition of this Collection
A finely bound selection of thirteen short stories featuring 'The Robin Hood of Modern Crime'.

Simon Templar, ‘The Saint’, ‘is a rambunctious adventurer who believes in old-fashioned romantic ideals, alter-ego perhaps of his Singaporean born creator Leslie Charles Bowyer Yin Charteris. Templar is prepared to lay down his life for these ideals, using considerable wit and intelligence, the Saint has a preference for avenging innocent victims.
 
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Price HK$ 4,000



The Urgent Hangman - Inscribed to Dennis Wheatley - Peter Cheyney

1938 - Collins, London - First Edition
Dennis Wheatley’s copy, inscribed by Peter Cheyney ‘To my good friend Dennis’ and dated ‘14. 6. 38’. With Wheatley’s illustrated bookplate.

A near fine copy of the first ‘Slim Callaghan’ novel, in fine and thus rare dust jacket.

Cheyney’s action-filled and action filled plots ran counter to the comfortable murder mysteries of the time, and Slim Callaghan was, like his American hard-boiled cousins, cynical tough and marginally mannered.
 
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Price HK$ 15,000



Don t Get Me Wrong - Inscribed to Dennis Wheatley - Peter Cheyney

1939 - Collins, London - First Edition
First edition of Peter Cheyney’s fifth Lemmy Caution novel. In fine and thus scarce dust jacket.

From the library of Cheyney’s friend and fellow author Dennis Wheatley with his wonderfully illustrated bookplate, and inscribed on the title page ‘
ToTo Dennis, from Peter Cheyney.’ On the back flap of the dust jacket is a review from Wheatley “Peter Cheyney is now becoming a definite menace to all other thriller writers; for who will read any other thriller writer but Cheyney if they can get a chance?”

Wheatley described Cheyney as ‘
the greatest liar unhung but a magnificent story teller’. 
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Price HK$ 9,000



The Riddle of the Sands - Erskine Childers

1903 - Smith, London - First Edition, First Impression
A crisp, clean and rare first edition, finely bound.

Written after Childers, an accomplished yachtsman, returned injured from action in South Africa. Highlighting the encroaching conflict with Germany, the novel was highly influential and is actually credited with the founding of British naval bases at Invergordon and Scapa Flow; newly regarded as strategically important after examination of the scenarios in Childers' text. Winston Churchill later gave the book the credit for persuading public opinion to fund vital measures against the German naval threat.

Contentiously described as the first modern spy thriller, vying for the title with Kipling's '
Kim', published two years earlier. 
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Price HK$ 21,000



Crooked House - Agatha Christie

1949 - Published for The Crime Club by Collins, London - First English Edition
Curious thing, rooms. Tell you quite a lot about the people who live in them’ – Chief Inspector Taverner.

Three generations of the Leonides family have live under the same roof of Three Gables, a large household over which the very old and very rich Aristide Leonides has long presided. However he was murdered by a poisoner, perhaps a member of his own family?

Agatha Christie once said ‘
Writing Crooked House was pure pleasure and I feel justified in my belief that it is one of my best.’ 
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Price HK$ 5,000



Cards on the Table - Agatha Christie

1936 - Published for The Crime Club by Collins, London - First Edition
An elegantly bound first edition, acclaimed as one of the best crafted of Christie's mysteries, featuring the master sleuth Hercule Poirot, Colonel Johnny Race, Superintendent Battle and the first appearance of Ariadne Oliver in a Poirot novel.

"The finest murder story of her career! Mrs Christie has never been more ingenious"–
Daily Mail.

A flamboyant party host is murdered in full view of a roomful of bridge players! Mr Shaitana was famous as a flamboyant party host. Nevertheless, he was a man of whom everybody was a little afraid. So, when he boasted to Poirot that he considered murder an art form, the detective had some reservations about accepting a party invitation to view Shaitana's private collection. Indeed, what began as an absorbing evening of bridge was to turn into a more dangerous game altogether!
 
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Price HK$ 5,000



Mrs McGinty's Dead - Agatha Christie

1952 - Published for The Crime Club by Collins, London - First Edition
A finely bound first edition of this popular Poirot mystery in which the intrepid inspector looks into the case of a brutally murdered landlady.

Mrs McGinty was dead. She was hit on the back of the head with some sharp, heavy implement and her pitifully small savings were taken... The inimitable Poirot, with his slightly comical aspect, his "little grey cells" and his genuinely warm heart, returns in an ingenious detective novel that once again earns for Agatha Christie the justifiable epithet of "incomparable".

The basis for the 1964 MGM movie
Murder Most Foul, starring Margaret Rutherford and Ron Moody. Filmed as part of the classic series with Rutherford as Miss Marple, although originally written by Christie as a case for Hercule Poirot. 
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Price HK$ 3,500



All Men are Lonely Now - Signed & Inscribed - Francis Clifford (pseud. Arthur Thompson)

1967 - Hodder and Stoughton, London - First Edition
A rather magnificent association copy, inscribed to Audrey and Miles Tripp the British crime and thriller writer who used the pseudonyms Michael Brett and John Michael Brett. Both Tripp and Thompson (who wrote under the pseudonym of Francis Clifford) where members of the Detection Club.

The inscription is dated 1967, the year of publication, using his actual name Arthur, and then signed as Francis Clifford to the title page.:-

To Audrey and Miles
with all the good wishes in the world
Arthur
 
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Price HK$ 2,000



 
Results 17 - 24 of 142 results