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Death and the Dancing Footman

3.81 ( 2,005 Ratings by Goodreads)
Death and the Dancing Footman

Death and the Dancing Footman

(Author)
3.81 (2,005 Ratings by Goodreads)
paperback
Published: 19 April, 1999
Standard worldwide delivery by Tue, July 14 - Fri, July 17
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Condition: USED
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Description

A winter weekend ends in snowbound disaster in a novel which remains a favourite among Marsh readers.

It began as an entertainment: eight people, many of them enemies, gathered for a winter weekend by a host with a love for theatre. They would be the characters in a drama that he would devise.

It ended in snowbound disaster. Everyone had an alibi – and most a motive as well. But Chief Detective Inspector Roderick Alleyn, when he finally arrived, knew it all hung on Thomas, the dancing footman…

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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9780006512370
ISBN10 0006512372
Number Of Pages 352
Item Weight 234 g
Product Dimensions 129 x 198 x 22 mm
Publisher / Reseller HarperCollins Publishers
Format paperback
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Media Reviews

‘The brilliant Ngaio Marsh ranks with Agatha Christie and Dorothy Sayers’
Times Literary Supplement

‘On the plane of art.’
Tatler

‘Nobody in her racket begins to touch her for writing grace and few possess her skill at creating potential corpses and suspects, building a puzzle and other essentials of grand and lofty detection. There hasn’t been anyone like her since the palmiest days of Dorothy L. Sayers.’
New York Herald Tribune

‘She is astoundingly good.’
Daily Express

‘The finest writer in the English languange of the pure, classical puzzle whodunnit. Among the crime queens, Ngaio Marsh stands out as an Empress.’
The Sun

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Author's Bio

Dame Ngaio Marsh was born in New Zealand in 1895 and died in February 1982. She wrote over 30 detective novels and many of her stories have theatrical settings, for Ngaio Marsh’s real passion was the theatre. She was both actress and producer and almost single-handedly revived the New Zealand public’s interest in the theatre. It was for this work that she received what she called her ‘damery’ in 1966.

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