Difference between revisions of "The Man In The Brown Suit"
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==Book Description== | ==Book Description== | ||
− | + | THE MAN IN THE BROWN SUIT is a remarkably good Christie. The narrator of most of the tale is Anne Beddingfeld, a Professor of Anthropology's attractive and enterprising daughter, who witnesses a fatal accident at a London tube station and is quick to notice some curious features about a man in a brown suit who says he is a doctor. Having secured an interview with a newspaper proprietor, she starts investigating the strange sequel to the mystery - the discovery of a woman's body in a lonely house at Marlowe belonging to Sir Eustace Pedlar, a Member of Parliament. Three clues help her - a smell of moth balls, a scrap of paper with some figures and "Kilmorden Castle" written on it, and an unexposed roll of Kodak film. The trail leads her to South Africa: and travelling on the same ship is Sir Eustace himself, who has been entrusted by a Government department with confidential documents for General Smuts. The voyage is exciting: and on arriving at Cape Town Anne finds herself plunged in further adventures of a most mysterious kind. | |
==Cover Variation (By Release Date)== | ==Cover Variation (By Release Date)== |
Latest revision as of 07:51, 3 February 2013
By Agatha Christie | |
Publisher | Harlequin Romance #337 |
Release Month | 1955 (US) |
Harlequin Romance Series # | |
Preceded by | The Good And The Bad |
Followed by | District Nurse |
- Author: Agatha Christie
- Publisher: Harlequin Romance #337
- Year: 1955
Book Description
THE MAN IN THE BROWN SUIT is a remarkably good Christie. The narrator of most of the tale is Anne Beddingfeld, a Professor of Anthropology's attractive and enterprising daughter, who witnesses a fatal accident at a London tube station and is quick to notice some curious features about a man in a brown suit who says he is a doctor. Having secured an interview with a newspaper proprietor, she starts investigating the strange sequel to the mystery - the discovery of a woman's body in a lonely house at Marlowe belonging to Sir Eustace Pedlar, a Member of Parliament. Three clues help her - a smell of moth balls, a scrap of paper with some figures and "Kilmorden Castle" written on it, and an unexposed roll of Kodak film. The trail leads her to South Africa: and travelling on the same ship is Sir Eustace himself, who has been entrusted by a Government department with confidential documents for General Smuts. The voyage is exciting: and on arriving at Cape Town Anne finds herself plunged in further adventures of a most mysterious kind.