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He Dies and Makes no Sign: A Golden Age Mystery (Dr Constantine Book 3) Kindle Edition
| Molly Thynne (Author) Find all the books, read about the author and more. See search results for this author |
| Amazon Price | New from | Used from |
“He had his enemies, I suppose?”
“Disputes, you mean? Over the merits of Puccini and Wagner, Strauss and Verdi! But people do not entice an old man from his home many years afterwards to avenge Wagner or Puccini!”
It was a shock to the Duchess of Steynes when her son announced his engagement to the grand-daughter of an obscure violinist, Julius Anthony; but still more of a shock was the discovery of Anthony’s murdered body in the cinema at which he played.
Dr. Constantine and Detective-Inspector Arkwright join forces in their third (and final) case together. Their only clue at the outset is the dead man’s mysterious assignation at the Trastevere restaurant, one of London’s most fashionable eateries, and located, as it happens, on the property of the Steyneses. The biggest challenge at first appears to find any kind of motive for the old man’s slaying – until their investigations lead in a fiendishly unexpected direction.
He Dies and Makes no Sign was first published in 1933. This new edition, the first in many decades, includes an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateSept. 5 2016
- File size881 KB
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Product details
- ASIN : B01KQ4Y3VG
- Publisher : Dean Street Press (Sept. 5 2016)
- Language : English
- File size : 881 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 223 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #534,918 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #4,270 in British Detectives
- #7,323 in British Detective Stories
- #22,918 in Cozy Mysteries (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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This story as such would have been okay but there are a lot of mistakes here in the text, indeed well above average. There are some spelling mistakes, but the major problem here is words being repeated and words actually missing. On top of that I still cannot work out how Manners, Constantine’s servant can bring someone to meet his boss that he only met apparently tonight, although this is in the early afternoon (perhaps Manners was a time-traveller). Also one character here has his name changing quite a lot, so sometimes it is Meger and then Merger.
When Julius Anthony goes missing so his granddaughter is distraught, but her intended is a friend of Constantine’s and worried that the police are not taking a missing persons report seriously asks him for help. So the doctor calls upon the aid of his friend, Inspector Arkwright of the Yard. When Mr Anthony turns up though he is found dead, leading these two men to investigate the case.
To be honest you should work out who killed Julius Anthony and why a long time before you finish this tale, despite some red herrings and family secrets. The plot isn’t really that original and topics that are brought up in this tale honestly had been dealt with better long before this book was written.
I think possibly that Molly Thynne got fed up writing such tales and that is why she stopped, after all she was never going to be a leading light in the genre, and others were outperforming her in plotting and in the case of this tale there are elements coming through from Sensation Fiction which had fallen out of fashion, and the topic of drugs had already been brought up and dealt with better in other types of fiction, including the crime genre.
I found the character of Doctor Constantine to be rather bland and Inspector Arkwright was amazingly incompetent in arresting the guilty party . Overall though , I would recommend this interesting crime novel ...in addition there is a fascinating introduction by Curtis Evans and it is yet another piece in the ever expanding jig saw of the full dimension of Golden Age Crime writing .
Occasionally the story switches the point-of-view in mid-scene which reduces the intensity of the experience, but it this bothered me only a little. One of the characters is given only brief mentions and is seen only once near the end, yet plays a crucial role in the conclusion, which left me feeling cheated.
The ending was not as strong as the rest of the book I had hoped for an exciting show-down between the sleuth and the villain, or a scene where the sleuth gathers the suspects, exposes motives and reveals whodunnit. Instead, a deus-ex-machina-style coincidence ends it all.

