Mr. Mason is here at his best. While working out very deftly an extremely intricate and clever plot, he gives us excellent characterization and a remarkably vivid series of glimpses into different settings and phases of life. Colonel John Strickland, wandering the earth in a vain attempt to forget his apparently hopeless passion for a famous young society beauty, visits Burma, where he buys a precious ruby for his lady and is induced to go tiger-hunting. He encounters "no other tiger," however, except a ruffianly man, "like a Greek god gone wrong," who makes a moment's mysterious appearance in the jungle. The jewel and the man are but two of many seemingly disconnected links that are forged into a chain of mystery that steadily tightens its hold upon the reader until the brilliant climax is reached. It is questionable whether Mr. Mason is to be praised more highly for his ingenuity or for his unforgettable word pictures.
Die drei Gentlemen: Roman
A.E.W. Mason
bookDer Saphir: Abenteuer & Romance
A.E.W. Mason
bookDer Zeuge der Verteidigung hat das Wort: Krimi
A.E.W. Mason
bookThe House of the Arrow
A.E.W. Mason
bookThey Wouldn't Be Chessmen
A.E.W. Mason
bookThey Wouldn't Be Chessmen
A.E.W. Mason
bookThe House of the Arrow
A.E.W. Mason
bookBlack Cat Weekly #112
Kaye George, Norman Spinrad, Adrian Cole, William Dylan Powell, Hal Charles, James Holding, Cordwainer Smith, A.E.W. Mason, Algis Budrys, David Mason
bookLas cuatro plumas (The Four Feathers)
A.E.W. Mason
audiobookA Romance of Wastdale
A.E.W. Mason, Sheba Blake
bookDilemmas
A.E.W. Mason
bookThe Sapphire
A.E.W. Mason
book