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Paperback The Secret Vanguard: Volume 5 Book

ISBN: 1504092007

ISBN13: 9781504092005

The Secret Vanguard: Volume 5

(Book #5 in the Sir John Appleby Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: New

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Book Overview

A Scotland Yard detective investigates a peculiar case of murder, poetry, kidnapping, and German spies in this classic British wartime thriller.

Insp. John Appleby is puzzled by the death of Philip Ploss. Who would want to kill such a harmless, quiet man known for writing mid-level nature poetry? . . .

Poetry is what Sheila Grant overhears two men discussing on a train outside Edinburgh. Their whole conversation seems absurd to her, especially after one of them misquotes the poet Swinburne. Unfortunately, her discovery quickly places her in danger . . .

Meanwhile back in London, Appleby learns of a kidnapping on a train in Scotland and senses a connection to Ploss's murder. Locating Sheila will certainly lead Appleby to Ploss's killer, but only if he finds her alive . . .

"You'd let a cobra walk all over you before you'd put this one down to defend yourself." --The New Yorker

"Very exciting, full of most painstakingly described violent action." --The Observer

"For sheer excitement and picturesque melodrama The Secret Vanguard will delight everyone." --New Statesma

Customer Reviews

1 rating

Nazis in a Forsaken Garden

"The Secret Vanguard" (1940) is an early Appleby, and almost pure adventure. Nazi spies communicate with each other by quoting poetry aloud on the British Rail system (I found this is a bit unbelievable---why didn't they just slip notes to each other in the lavatory?)A poet is murdered near London after hearing himself misquoted on a train, and Inspector John Appleby of New Scotland Yard is delegated to solve the crime.On another train in Scotland, this story's heroine, Sheila Grant notices that the Swineburne poem quoted by a traveling companion had a couple of extra lines added to it. She makes the mistake of pointing this out to another man in her compartment:"'It was odd," said Sheila, "that he should put in four lines of his own.'"'Lines of his own?' The man opposite looked at her in large astonishment."Sheila nodded. "'Where the westerly spur of the furthermost mountain/ Hovers falcon-like over the heart of the bay.'"'They began like that. And if you happen to know about Swinburne of course they stick out a mile.'"Of course.Sheila's misplaced erudition involves her in a desperate chase across Northern Scotland. She is abducted, escapes, meets a blind poet who explains the meaning of the false Swinburne, and finally encounters Appleby, who is chasing poetical clues of his own.There is a bang-up climax involving the British Army, a very well organized group of Nazi sympathizers, and a gaggle of little old ladies who happen to be lunching at the castle where everything falls apart for the bad guys.H.R.F. Keating in his 1987 book, "Crime & Mystery: the 100 Best Books," says this about our literate Detective-Inspector:"To Appleby one could well apply the words which Michael Innes, writing under his own name [J.I.M. Stewart] in the novella "The Man Who Wrote Detective Stories," employs to describe that hero: 'He loved tumbling out scraps of poetry from a ragbag collection in his mind - and particularly in absurd and extravagant contexts.' " Still---Nazi spies who quote Swineburne's "Forsaken Garden" on a British train----really, Professor Innes!
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