Difference between revisions of "The Glass Ladder"

From Romance Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "Category:1951 ReleasesCategory:Category Romance <!--add the correct year--> {| cellpadding="2" style="border:3px solid lightgray; font-size:86%" align="right" |- | colspa...")
 
 
Line 22: Line 22:
 
==Book Description==
 
==Book Description==
  
 +
Rick Moson, private eye, with the lucrative Global Indemnity account, had a hunch that all hell would start popping when heist-artist Mike Duryea was released from the penitentiary after serving five years for the Rajah Emerald haul. Global had shelled out $75,000, the rock had never turned up, and now sundry trigger-happy characters were all itching for the fateful day.
 +
 +
Though long missing, the giant emerald was now reaping a harvest of murder - starting with the mean death of a furtive, lonely stranger in a Skidrow rooming house. A corpse with no identity - except a bundle of clippings on the Rajah Emerald case. Rick took it from there, talked to Duryea's hard-boiled girl friend just before she died, followed the trail through to a respectable jewel merchant who blew the top of his head off rather than answer questions - and puzzled over the strange behavior of an ex-bank messenger now turned Yogi and apparently unafraid of dying.
 +
 +
The Rajah Emerald was an evil green eye, with death in its wake, and Rick had to witness two more sudden deaths before the coveted jewel came to light - in the cunning cache of a secretive and seemingly naive person who had lived in its power for five long years!
  
 
==Cover Variation (By Release Date)==
 
==Cover Variation (By Release Date)==

Latest revision as of 20:20, 22 January 2013

1951 US Edition
By Paul W. Fairman
Publisher Harlequin Romance #139
Release Month 1951 (US)
Harlequin Romance Series #
Preceded by Emma Hart
Followed by The Lady Was A Tramp

Book Description

Rick Moson, private eye, with the lucrative Global Indemnity account, had a hunch that all hell would start popping when heist-artist Mike Duryea was released from the penitentiary after serving five years for the Rajah Emerald haul. Global had shelled out $75,000, the rock had never turned up, and now sundry trigger-happy characters were all itching for the fateful day.

Though long missing, the giant emerald was now reaping a harvest of murder - starting with the mean death of a furtive, lonely stranger in a Skidrow rooming house. A corpse with no identity - except a bundle of clippings on the Rajah Emerald case. Rick took it from there, talked to Duryea's hard-boiled girl friend just before she died, followed the trail through to a respectable jewel merchant who blew the top of his head off rather than answer questions - and puzzled over the strange behavior of an ex-bank messenger now turned Yogi and apparently unafraid of dying.

The Rajah Emerald was an evil green eye, with death in its wake, and Rick had to witness two more sudden deaths before the coveted jewel came to light - in the cunning cache of a secretive and seemingly naive person who had lived in its power for five long years!

Cover Variation (By Release Date)

1951 <br\>US Edition