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Bat Wing / Fire-Tongue - by Sax Rohmer (Paperback)
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About this item
Highlights
- BAT WING Occult detective Paul Harley is presented with his toughest case when he is asked to investigate a case of Voodoo magic at an estate in Surrey.
- Author(s): Sax Rohmer
- 374 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Mystery & Detective
Description
About the Book
Sax Rohmer is the creator of the famous Asian villain, Fu Manchu. This volume features two occult mysteries from the 1920s featuring investigator Paul Harvey, Rohmer's homage to Poe's C. Auguste Dupin.
Book Synopsis
BAT WING
Occult detective Paul Harley is presented with his toughest case when he is asked to investigate a case of Voodoo magic at an estate in Surrey. He and his partner, Malcolm Knox, are contacted by wealthy land baron, Colonel Menendez, who is convinced that his life is in peril. He is certain that an Obeah threat has followed him from Cuba when a bat wing is found nailed to his door. When Harley and Knox arrive at Cray's Folly they find a household filled with vague menace. Mendendez's cousin, Madame de Stämer, is putting on a brave front, but her companion, Val Beverley, knows that someone has been wandering the halls at night. And why does their neighbor, Colin Camber, hate the Colonel so much? Is there any significance in their shared ties to Voodoo? And can Harley find out what is behind these threats before this case ends in murder?
FIRE-TONGUE
Paul Harley is takes on a new client when Sir Charles Abingdon, a retired bone specialist, appears at his door one evening. Abingdon believes his life to be in danger and asks for Harley's aid. He believes he is being followed though he can get no clear look at his pursuer. A manuscript of his has gone missing, and he has been recently attacked in the street. He asks Harley to dine with him that night and upon arriving, Harley senses an atmosphere of danger but can pick up nothing specific. Sir Charles further confesses that he is distressed by the attentions a distinguished Persian gentleman has been showing his daughter, Phyllis Abingdon. And now, as they sit to dinner, Sir Charles is gripped by a sudden seizure, rasping out the words, "Fire-Tongue....Nicol Brinn," before collapsing into his chair. Harley discovers all too soon that Sir Charles' sudden death isn't from natural causes, and that a larger mystery looms over them all.
Review Quotes
"The nearest approach to the pure detective-story that Sax ever made."-Cay Van Ash & Elizabeth Sax Rohmer, Master of Villainy "Rohmer throws out some red herrings, introduces a little romance, some unusual characters, and a little exoticism...with a nod to Edgar Allan Poe's Dupin and to A.C. Doyle's Holmes and Watson."-Jenclair, A Garden Carried in the Pocket "Fire-Tongue is one of Rohmer's best and, in this reviewer's opinion, even better than his Fu Manchu series."-C. Alan Loewen, Many Books