![]() ![]() This author participates in the Readers' Favorite Book Donation Program, which was created to help nonprofit and charitable organizations (schools, libraries, convalescent homes, soldier donation programs, etc.) by providing them with free books and to help authors garner more exposure for their work. To begin, click the purple email icon to send this author a private email, and be sure to describe your book or include a link to your Readers' Favorite review page or Amazon page. What sites your reviews are posted on (B&N, Amazon, etc.) and whether you send digital (eBook, PDF, Word, etc.) or hard copies of your books to each other for review is up to you. Simply put, you agree to provide an honest review an author's book in exchange for the author doing the same for you. This author participates in the Readers' Favorite Book Review Exchange Program, which is open to all authors and is completely free. To begin, click the purple email icon to send this author a private email. You and the author will discuss what sites you will post your review to and what kind of copy of the book you would like to receive (eBook, PDF, Word, paperback, etc.). The author will provide you with a free copy of their book in exchange for an honest review. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.This author participates in the Readers' Favorite Free Book Program, which is open to all readers and is completely free. The Belfry Murder was originally published in 1933. ![]() And for Inspector Hugh Collier of Scotland Yard, young and ambitious, backing his intuitions against the opinions of his superiors, it is a case full of pitfalls, whose issues might spell promotion-or a fatal mark against his name. For Martin Drury, chicken-farming in Sussex it brings the gleam of romance and a chance of knight errantry. Brown, and his gang, it is first an adventure, but becomes a matter of life and death. The search for the emerald has begun.įor a man calling himself Mr. ![]() Years later a Russian waiter sells a secret twice over, and pays the ultimate price. What has become of the now missing jewels? Has she hidden them somewhere, or entrusted them to someone before her death? ![]() Mary dies of pneumonia a few days after reaching England, in a room over her brother's antique shop. When Mary Borlase, English governess of the little Countess Nadine, escapes from Russia during the Great War, she brings with her jewels belonging to the ill-fated Romanoffs, including a famous emerald, the Eye of Nero. ![]()
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