
Thirteen Guests
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Narrated by:
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David Thorpe
About this listen
On a fine autumn weekend Lord Aveling hosts a hunting party at his country house, Bragley Court. Among the guests are an actress, a journalist, an artist and a mystery novelist.
The unlucky 13th is John Foss, injured at the local train station and brought to the house to recuperate - but John is nursing a secret of his own. Soon events take a sinister turn when a painting is mutilated, a dog stabbed and a man strangled. Death strikes more than one of the house guests, and the police are called. Detective-Inspector Kendall's skills are tested to the utmost as he tries to uncover the hidden past of everyone at Bragley Court.
©1936 Estate of J. Jefferson Farjeon (P)2020 SoundingsSo much better than the modern cosy crime imitations!
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The book is very well read insofar as many of these clever dialogues are highlighted; whereas if one read it, I / you / one would probably miss their point or even skip them. That suggests the text might be very well done on stage. Some of the protagonists especially the journalist Bultin and the artist Pratt talk about things without exactly specifying what; such exchanges could be seen as a form of understatement.
Pratt as portrayed in the reading as gay, and his relationship with Pratt as one full of latent sexual energy e.g. they share a room in a stately home.
In comparison most of the <Greats> of pre-WW2 eg Christie, Sayers, Marsh, and Allingham seem banal in comparison. None of them are in the same class for what Dorothy Sayers wrote of Farjeon, "(unsurpassed for) creepy skill in mysterious adventures." Great escapism provided you aren't put off by the stately home setting; in this book it's peopled by plenty of rounded figures 'warts and all'.
Hard to explain its attraction; best that you listen
Cleverest whodunnit of Golden - or any? - Age
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Interesting
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David Thorpe is an adequate narrator
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Meanwhile a journalist who loathes everyone and thing else, makes copious notes that he repeats to the police. (They arrive in cliched diligence.) The journalist’s sole companion with whom he has a love-hate relationship, the are the anthesis of each other, is an artist who turns out to have also have noticed ‘things’ such as, an unlocked door and the reason his latest painting has been destroyed.
After that.... a horse, a hysterical wife, lots smoking of various cigarettes, verbally back stabbing, supercilious comments ....
Monotonous Tone
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