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Paperback Stop Press Book

ISBN: 1912194155

ISBN13: 9781912194155

Stop Press

(Book #4 in the Sir John Appleby Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

$20.29
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Book Overview

A fatal moment came when Mr Eliot ought to have stopped - and didn't. After that there was no stopping.Richard Eliot has written bestselling crime novels for years. Begun as means to fund his son's education at Eton, his protagonist 'the Spider' started out as a cunning criminal and later evolved into an ingenious investigator. Despite the series success, Mr Eliot is tiring of his own invention and is looking forward to retiring. But...

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

death by dons

In my opinion the finest example of the classical English detective story ( even if it is written by a Scotsman ). Crusty Oxford dons ( as told by one them ); two country house parties, not just one; endless complexities of plot; malicious academic verbal fencing... and of course a sufficiency of corpses. Lovely stuff if it's your period.

Also known as "The Spider Strikes"

"Stop Press" (1939), the fourth Detective Appleby mystery is basically a British comedy of manners wrapped inside a thriller about international arms dealers, enclosed in a whodunit that Mary Roberts Rineheart would have been proud to acknowledge. In fact if a mysterious prankster called the Spider is substituted for Rineheart's Bat---well, Innes adds unique touches of his own to a weekend in the British countryside gone awry. Popular author, Richard Eliot, has written numerous detective novels, featuring 'The Spider', a daring, clever criminal in earlier books, and an equally clever private investigator in later ones. But when the Spider comes to life--first to burgle an eccentric neighbor, then to harass the author's family, and finally to attend his own birthday party-- Inspector John Appleby is called up from London by his sister (I believe this is the only Appleby novel in which she appears) to discover the fictional creature's mundane identity. Inspector Appleby makes a dramatic entry into Rust Hall during a mysteriously contrived black-out and begins to sort out a very large cast of characters, including a psychiatrist, a growling ghost writer, feuding Oxford professors, Eliot's publisher, an actor, a ne'er-do-well brother, a herd of pigs, an art-collecting arms-dealer--well, the list goes on and on. I had to read "Stop Press" twice in order to fix its dramatis personae firmly in mind. It's not the best Appleby novel but it is certainly the most complex. The mystery itself is cluttered with subplots, and the solution is rather contrived. Read "Stop Press" for its slowly building atmosphere of terror. Rust Hall and later, Shoon Abbey are lovingly detailed architectural monstrosities that serve as the brooding lairs of The Spider. One might even categorize this novel as 'Early Appleby Gothic.'
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