Rabu, 11 November 2015

The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung

The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung

Obtain the connect to download this The Crime Doctor, By E. W. Hornung and also begin downloading. You can want the download soft documents of the book The Crime Doctor, By E. W. Hornung by going through other activities. Which's all done. Now, your resort to review a publication is not constantly taking and carrying guide The Crime Doctor, By E. W. Hornung everywhere you go. You can conserve the soft documents in your gadget that will never ever be far and read it as you like. It is like reviewing story tale from your gizmo then. Now, start to love reading The Crime Doctor, By E. W. Hornung and get your new life!

The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung

The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung



The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung

Read and Download The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung

Ernest William Hornung (7 June 1866 – 22 March 1921) was an English author and poet known for writing the A. J. Raffles series of stories about a gentleman thief in late 19th-century London. Hornung was educated at Uppingham School; as a result of poor health he left the school in December 1883 to travel to Sydney, where he stayed for two years. He drew on his Australian experiences as a background when he began writing, initially short stories and later novels. Hornung’s prose is widely admired for its lucid-yet-simple style. Oliver Edwards, writing in The Times, considered that ”not the least attractive part of the Raffles books is the simple, plain, unaffected language in which each one of them is written”. The obituarist in the same newspaper agrees, and thinks Hornung had ”a power of good and clear description and a talent for mystery and surprise”. Colin Watson also considers the point, and observes that in Hornung’s writing, ”superfluous description has been avoided and account of action is to the point”, while Doyle admired his ”sudden use of the right adjective and the right phrase”, something the writer and journalist Jeremy Lewis sees as a ”flamboyant, Kiplingesque taste for the vivid”.

The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung

  • Published on: 2015-11-11
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .42" w x 6.00" l, .57 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 186 pages
The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung

Review Mr. Hornung's new hero is not a committer but a preventer of crime, one whose mission to quote his own words, is to busy himself "in saving people from themselves while they're still worth saving, in that prevention which is not only better than cure, but the vital principle of modern therapeutics in every other direction. In keeping good material out of the prison at all cost." Even, when such action implies becoming more or less an accessory after the fact. This idea of "The Crime Doctor" is an excellent one on which to base a series of stories, and Mr. Hornung uses it skillfully. Doctor Dollar has been led by a startling personal experience to interest himself, first in the possible results of surgical operations upon character, and then in the employment of other means to obviate a potential from becoming an actual criminal. His work in this new branch of the profession is aided by all sorts of sanatorium he runs for the benefit of his especial type of patients, to whom he is both physician and father confessor, many of them being quite unaware that they are being treated for "incipient criminality." Naturally a young man in this position is bound to have adventures, particularly when one of his friends and supporters is so important a personage as the Home Secretary of England, his first encounter with whom provides the book's opening episode. Doctor Dollar frequently finds it necessary to play the part of detective in addition to his other two roles, and does it very successfully. Sometimes, in fact, he is rather more detective than physician, as in the affair of "The Golden Key," and had he not been both the matter of "The Schoolmaster Abroad," would have ended disastrously and he himself failed to pay his debt. He is all these and lover to boot in certain of those cases in which the Lady Vera Molye, the book's frank and spirited heroine, is the central figure. And once or twice he actually does become an accessory after the fact, though surely no one could help sympathizing with his decision in the matter of "One Possessed" and his treatment of "The Second Murderer" ---- whose nerves he wrecks in a way the description of which is one of the most interesting things in the book. He is a agreeable and appealing hero, this "Crime Doctor" with the slight squint and the patch of silver hair above one ear, quick-witted, enthusiastic, a man for whom loaded pistols have no terrors--- does he not walk right up to one in the very beginning and collects a number of them before the end?--- and we suspect that his creator is fond of him and does not intend to let his adventures close with this single volume. Else why is the arch villain of them all, the educated and intelligent criminal contemptuous of "battle, murder and sudden death," more to be feared than a dozen of the merely ignorant and vicious, still at liberty upon the very last page? It has been said that throughout his subsequent life Sheridan was afraid of the author of "The School for Scandal"; and it is probable that Mr. Hornung is in somewhat the same position. With each new book of his comes the chorus, "It's good, but it isn't `Raffles'!" Whether this new hero will prove as popular as that debonair thief only time will tell, but in either case he can congratulate himself upon the fact that Doctor Dollar may very likely bring certain aspects of crime to the attention of people who but for him might never have thought of them. So "The Crime Doctor" has a value outside the fulfillment of its ostensible purpose of providing lively entertainment well suited either to the Summer hammock or the Winter easy chair. -- The New York TimesAn excellent addition to any classical detective library...The eight stories contained inThe Crime Doctor are examples of Edwardian crime fiction at its best. Intellect prevails over chaos, and scientific progress can solve all social ills.... This is an attractive volume from a new small press, and a welcome reprint of this lesser-known classic... -- Steven Steinbock, The Strand Magazine


The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung

Where to Download The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung

Most helpful customer reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Out of the fog By Louis In the mid 1800's England was an empire. Under British colonial rule, Queen Victoria's armies occupied twenty-five percent of the nations of this planet, implementing parliamentary law and English culture across the globe. No other fictional character bolstered the perception of Anglo-supremacy and Christian virtue than Sherlock Holmes, the UK's foremost consulting detective. But in the early 1900s, the English empire started to crumble. Their involvement in the Boer wars, a difficult and bloody campaign that saw the conception of concentration camps for women and children, had the British citizenry equally divided between support and protest. Out of this moral ambiguity and social turmoil comes EW Hornung's Crime Doctor, a man who himself crippled in that horrific campaign. He is not portrayed as a superman who needs the intellectual challenge of pursuing criminals to sway his boredom, but as an all too human solider, who after being cured of his injury that caused a personality imbalance, has a deep seeded desire to help his fellow man by the eradication of crime, by using any means at his disposal. It would be unfair for me to list any highlights of his adventures since they follow a chronological order and I wouldn't want to rob you of any enjoyment by inadvertently giving away any plot points. But I will say that reading THE CRIME DOCTOR is time well spent.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. More than just a great detective By Bill7704 THE CRIME DOCTOR wonderfully captures the time when England's gaslights dimmed in favor of the flicker of the new electric light and her place as a superpower began to slowly corrode. Out of this transitory period emerges E. W. Hornrung's Crime Doctor. After surviving a grievous head wound attained during the folly of the Boer War, a brutal campaign in which atrocities where committed by the English against Boer civilians, John Dollar lays down his rifle to pursue the noble calling of medicine. He establishes an exclusive practice, one that only caters to the criminal classes. It is his belief that most criminals are unbalanced individuals and given the proper treatments can be cure of their compulsions. Of course, there are a few setbacks... deadly setbacks. And these failures serve as the motivation for Dr. Dollar to take a more hostile approach to the business of crime. After reading this absorbing collection, I guarantee you will be wanting more.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Citizen...Soldier...Doctor...Sleuth... By Steve As THE CRIME DOCTOR, Doctor John Dollar is an an amalgam of intelligence, cunning, strength, and courage. He is a man who has faced the horror of war and emerged as tempered steel, bringing with him his very unique perspective of the world, the criminal mind - and how to do battle with those of evil intent.John Dollar, the literary creation of EW Hornung (brother-in-law to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, and creator of Raffles - the Gentleman Thief), stands out as a detective that deserves his place among the great sleuths of popular fiction.After reading this book, readers will be left to solve one final mystery- why this collection of fine mystery stories never reached the popularity of Raffles...

See all 4 customer reviews... The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung


The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung PDF
The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung iBooks
The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung ePub
The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung rtf
The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung AZW
The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung Kindle

The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung

The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung

The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung
The Crime Doctor, by E. W. Hornung

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar