The Seventh Customer and the Mandarin
by Fergus Hume
Here again, Hagar, who runs a mortgage loan store, and in between, she investigates mysterious issues related to her customers.
missing
by Catherine Louisa Pirkis
Loveday Brooke's knot girlfriend is still on tour.
The Sixth Customer and the Silver Teapot
by Fergus Hume
Here again, Hagar, who runs a mortgage loan store, and in between, she investigates mysterious issues related to her customers.
The Adventure of the Supercilious Attaché
by Grant Allen
Another story by Miss Cayley.
The Fifth Customer and the Copper Key
by Fergus Hume
A white-haired man, short of spinning, comes with a copper key for mortgages. The key itself is not worth much, but Hagar takes note of the unusual symbols that are drawn on the key and raise her curiosity. In the investigation of the case, she finds out that the symbols are a clue to the hiding place of precious paintings.
The Clairvoyants
by Arthur B. Reeve
Constance Dunlap assists his girlfriend and writes with a mystery that contains a combination of dreams, marriages and Wall Street.
The Fourth Customer and the Crucifix
by Fergus Hume
In this mystery there is an elaborate silver cross, featuring unexpected features, and a spicy Italian husband. Hagar has enough trouble.
The Adventure of the Cantankerous Old Lady
by Grant Allen
We presently showcase a particularly fun woman-murderer, Miss Cayley, whose modernism does not resemble no-more heroes than Bridget Jones.
The Third Customer and the Jade Idol
by Fergus Hume
Hagar, the counselor, investigates yet another mysterious matter.
The Second Customer and the Amber Beads
by Fergus Hume
Here is still the story of Hagar who cares for his cousin's mortgage office. One evening, a woman comes to mortgage a precious necklace and is shortly accused of murder, but Hagar suspects that not everything seems.
The Ghost of Fountain Lane
by Catherine Louisa Pirkis
Loveday Brooke spokesman leaves for a vacation, but is soon investigated in two different cases - a penalty and a ghost.
The House of Clocks
by Anna Katherine Green
Violet Strange goes to an artistic nurse to investigate the matter of a widow and her step daughter.
The Eavesdroppers
by Arthur B. Reeve
Constance Dunlap investigates yet another case.
Drawn Daggers
by Catherine Louisa Pirkis
Here's the girlfriend's knot Loveday Brooke still on a trip. This time she has investigated a man's speech, which has received texts of sharp knives late in the mail, fearing that they threaten a lot of missing or precious necklaces.
The First Customer and the Florentine
by Fergus Hume
Hagar has taken care of her cousin's mortgage office and one day she comes to her young man with a very valuable book. He says that the book contains secrets that can be referred to a large part of the money, and Hagar helps him to get to the bottom of the case.
The Dreaming Lady
by Anna Katherine Green
Millionaire is nieuw en zijn cod is niet gevonden overal. The sister of the man seeks the assistance of the narrator Violet Strange in the solution of the case.
The Bolted Door
by Edith Wharton
A playwright who has been unsuccessfully trying for ten years to strike at theater stars is now sad and confesses to killing an uncle with a view to being arrested. Men det blir vanskeligere å få folk til å tro på historien.
The Gamblers
by Arthur B. Reeve
Constance Dunlap is invited to an evening gala dinner with his neighbor, but soon it turns out that more people have a good time than friends.
The Redhill Sisterhood
by Catherine Louisa Pirkis
The clever Loveday Brooke is available to investigate cases related to burglary and mysterious nuns with a witchcraft.
The Grotto Spectre
by Anna Katherine Green
A young widow seeks Violet Strange's aid because of his wife's death, which seemed mysterious and related to a scandal within the family.
The Coming of Hagar
by Fergus Hume
The first story by Hagar Stanley, a gay girl looking for shelter with her old uncle. The cousin, Jacob Dix, is a spiky warrior and is known for his kindness. His only friend, if a friend should call, is a dull lawyer named Pork who desires the rich man's wealth. The guardian's son and heir of wealth have disappeared without trace, and Pig takes a trick of fraud and pretties to change the cod.
The Gun Runners
by Arthur B. Reeve
Central American rebels are seeking Constance Dunlap for fundraising, but the case comes to light when a government prosecutor is in charge of the rebels' headstroke.
The Murder at Troyte's Hill
by Catherine Louisa Pirkis
An old man finds murder in his home and the police sends by Loveday Brooke Speaker to assist in the investigation of the case.
The Golden Slipper
by Anna Katharine Green
This story is a violinist violinist stranger, but here she investigates a case where a young girl is suspected of theft.
The story is after the American crime story queen Anna Katharine Greene, but Agatha Christie just said that it had been an effect from her as she began writing criminal proceedings.
The Montezuma Emerald
by Rodrigues Ottolengui
This story first appeared in the magazine Strand Magazine in 1895. This tells of the mysterious man-made relationship associated with the precious Montezuma emerald.
The author of the story, Rodrigues Ottolengui, was instrumental in laying the foundation for modern dentistry, as well as being a creator of criminal records, but you can access his brief and curious biography below.
The Black Bag Left On A Doorstep
by Catherine Louisa Pirkis
The story first appeared in 1893 in The Ludgate Monthly magazine, published in London. Here's the story of Loveday Brooke, the poem poke, but many want to mean that, with the story of her, Pirkis actually broke a paper in the writing of criminal records, and that for that first time, women's point of view had their pleasure .
The Forgers
by Arthur B. Reeve
This story is the first in the category about Constance Dunlap and tells us how Dunlap, as an ordinary housewife, is bored into crimes.
The Ides of March
by Ernest William Hornung
This story is the first thing that Hornung wrote about the character Raffles, who was on the surface of an idle gentleman, but at the same time was a biased burglar of the greatest child.
The Second Bullet
by Anna Katharine Green
Here's the skelegga Violet Strange starring again and this time she investigates the mysterious death of one of her heroes.
The Azteck Opal
by Rodrigues Ottolengui
A precious jewel has disappeared and Barnes spokesman takes the matter.
The Princess's Vengeance
by Catherine Louisa Pirkis
In this story, the girlfriend Loveday Brooke mysteriously disappeared from a young girl.
The Embezzlers
by Arthur B. Reeve
Here's another story from Constance Dunlap and her adventures.
In addition to incorporating technology more into crime stories, Reeve is considered the first author who uses the style to gather all the characters together at the end, specifying who the culprit is by tracking the story to him. This was becoming a classic solution for many later authors.
The Costume Piece
by Ernest William Hornung
Here is another story about The Raffles Thief or The Amateur Cracksman Collection by EW Hornung.
Ernest William Hornung, who was a Hungarian family, published his first story in 1890, but he wrote the same books of novels and short stories. The stories about the Raffles enjoyed immense popularity.
An Intangible Clue
by Anna Katharine Green
Violet Strange does not understand any matter, but this time she has a mysterious murder that even the police are intrusive.
Anna Katharine Green was one of the first US crime prosecutors and considered her stories well thought-out and convincing, which was not always the case when the criminal records were breaking out children's shoes. Among the fans from Green were well-known authors such as Arthur Conan Doyle, Mary Roberts Rineheart and Agatha Christie, but the latter claimed that it was primarily influenced by Anna Katharine Greens stories that they themselves became criminal prosecutors.
The Nameless Man
by Rodrigues Ottolengui
In this story, Barnes spokesman investigates a person's wake that woke up on a good weather day and had no idea who he was.
Rodrigues Ottolengui received an early interest in criminal proceedings, but he argued that such literature coached people in general terms. Not long ago until the interest became so great that he started writing such stories himself and eventually wrote six full books. For fun, one might feel like a close-up of Yonkers and the policeman who had the problem, made it possible to identify the deceased with the help of dentists. The idea he had received from Ottolenguis's book became a revolution in such matters.
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We offer short criminal records from the years of such sagas, but they did not become a special literary subject until the beginning of the 19th century. Also, we'll include information about favorite artists, who, though familiar with some of the features, pave the way for those we know better, authors like Arthur Conan Doyle and Agatha Christie.
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Grant Allen
Charles Grant Blairfindie Allen was born in Canada in 1848. He wrote a lot about science and novel as well, but he was, among other things, an innovator in the writing of science fiction.
Anna Katharine Green
Anna Katharine Green was an American poet, who was among the first criminal prosecutors in Iceland, and thought her stories well thought-out and compelling, which was not always the case when the criminal case was breaking out children's shoes. She was there with the help of her father, who was a lawyer.
Ernest William Hornung
Ernest William Hornung (1866-1921), who was a Hungarian family, published his first story in 1890, but he wrote the same books of novels and short stories. Most famous, however, is his story about the character Raffles, who was on the surface of an idle gentleman, but at the same time was a busty burglar of the most serious type. He wrote a number of short stories about the Raffles and, in addition, the only full-length novel. The stories are of great popularity and have been both dramatically and film-based, with games like Cary Grant, David Niven, John Barrymore and Ronald Colman in the lead. It's nice to note that Hornung was married to Constance Doyle, who was the sister of Arthur Conan Doyle, the author of the story of Sherlock Holmes.
Fergus Hume
Fergus Hume was born in England in 1859 and when he was three years old, his family moved to New Zealand. After graduating, he moved to Melbourne, Australia, where he began writing a play and later his first novel, The Mystery of a Hansom Cab , who became a metal book.
Rodrigues Ottolengui
Despite the fact that Rodrigues Ottolengui has not written many pages in the crime story's collection, he was one of many remarkable writers, and the spokesman Barnes he created lives a good life through stories such as The Aztec Opal and The Montezuma Emerald. His practice is remarkable for many other reasons, but he was a great entrepreneur of modern medicine, one of the leading experts in American butterflies at the time, practicing sculpture of eliah, as well as being an enthusiastic photographer.
Catherine Louisa Pirkis
Although few people know Catherine Louisu Pirkis today, she was at the time (1877-1894) with popular creators of recreational literature, and her stories about Loveday Brooke's pioneer poplar are still released even though it does not go high. If many people mean that with the creation of Loveday Brooke, Pirkis has actually broken a paper in the writing of criminal records, and that for the first time, women's point of view has enjoyed their enjoyment. Until then, women's poems were "stereotypes" that women generally did not feel sympathetic with.
Arthur B. Reeve
Arthur B. Reeve was an American criminal writer who is most familiar with his stories by Professor Craig Kennedy and his fellow journalist Walter Jameson, on the one hand, and the woman-winger Constance Dunlop, on the other. Many people argue that Reeve has broken a paper in the writing of criminal records, especially with the emphasis on incorporating science and technology into their stories; where he is actually the forerunner of many later authors. He was very popular at the time both sides of the Atlantic, the United States and England.