Mr. Doyle & Dr. Bell: a Victorian mystery
β Scribed by Howard Engel
- Publisher
- ABRAMS Books;Duckworth
- Year
- 2014;2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 167 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
"Engel captures the spirit of Doyle's tone in the Holmes sagas without it being a stilted or pale imitation . . . A lively, engaging page-turner." βCurled Up With a Good Book
Howard Engel is the award-winning writer whose Benny Cooperman mysteries garner rave international reviewsβfans stretch from Canada to Japan, England, Germany, Italy, Spain, Denmark, and the United States. His latest, Mr. Doyle & Dr. Bell, is a brilliant departure from the Cooperman series. The year is 1879, and in Edinburgh, Alan Lambert has been tried, convicted, and sentenced to hang for the murder of a dazzling opera star and her lover. But Lambert's brother believes he's innocent and pleads with Dr. Bell, a celebrated professor of anatomy, to uncover the truth. Bell agrees and sets out to crack the case with his keen powers of deduction and the help of his student, Arthur Conan Doyle.
"Charming . . . [This book] will satisfy the craving of...
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
There comes a time in a ladyβs life when she needs to take matters into her own handsβ¦ A Scheming Minx Emily Goodnight, a curiously smart bluestocking β who cannot see a thing without her blasted spectacles β is raising the art of meddling to new heights. Why leave her future in the hand
There comes a time in a lady's life when she needs to take matters into her own hands... A SCHEMING MINX Emily Goodnight, a curiously smart bluestocking β who cannot see a thing without her blasted spectacles β is raising the art of meddling to new heights. Why leave her future in the hands of fat
Hellβs Belle
**When the church bell tolls thrice in the middle of the night, evil this way comes β¦** Lizzie Grace and Belle Kent, her witch familiar, are living and working on the Faelan Werewolf Reservation--one that has banned the use of magic within its borders. Although they have their supporters--including
Widowed Mary Bolton, like Miss Jean Brodie, considers herself in her prime. Not satisfied with car boot sales, dances at the bowling club and reading to the elderly, she throws herself into bellringing with gusto - much to the annoyance of her neighbours.But when the industrious Mary is found swingi