Browse all books

Other editions of book Tenant for Death

  • Tenant for Death

    Cyril Hare

    language (Reading Essentials, Dec. 3, 2018)
    An Inspector Mallett mystery - Daylesford Gardens, South Kensington, is an unlikely address for the discovery of death by strangulation. Even more unusual is that the house does not belong to the deceased financier. In the meantime, the mysterious tenant, Colin James, has disappeared. Inspector Mallett of Scotland Yard is brought in to unravel a complicated trail.
  • Tenant for Death

    Cyril Hare

    language (, May 25, 2020)
    Cyril Hare's first mystery novel. Hare was a magistrate, learned in the law, and therefore familiar with the term "tenant for life" -- the holder of a property only while alive: that is, the property does not form part of his estate. But what is a tenant for death? Mr. Colin James may be an example: as the novel starts, he has mysteriously disappeared from the house he had rented, and gone to France. There is a murder, needless to say; also Inspector Mallett of Scotland Yard.]
  • Tenant for Death

    Cyril Hare

    (Faber and Faber, Sept. 21, 2009)
    Originally published in 1937, Tenant for Death is the first novel by Cyril Hare, one of the best-loved Golden Age crime writers. Two young estate agent's clerks are sent to check an inventory on a house in Daylesford Gardens, South Kensington. Upon arrival, they find an unlisted item - a corpse. Furthermore, the mysterious tenant, Colin James, has disappeared. In a tale which uncovers many of the seedier aspects of the world of high finance, Hare also introduces his readers to the formidable Inspector Mallett of Scotland Yard. Upon first publication the Times Literary Supplement praised Tenant for Death as 'a most ingenious story' while the Spectator celebrated its 'wit, fair play, and characterization' and also declared that 'a new star has risen'.
  • Tenant for Death

    Cyril Hare

    language (, May 15, 2019)
    Two young estate agent's clerks are sent to check an inventory on a house in Daylesford Gardens, South Kensington. Upon arrival, they find an unlisted item - a corpse. Furthermore, the mysterious tenant, Colin James, has disappeared.In a tale which uncovers many of the seedier aspects of the world of high finance, Hare also introduces his readers to the formidable Inspector Mallett of Scotland Yard.
  • Tenant for Death

    Cyril Hare

    (Dover Pubns, Jan. 1, 1981)
    Originally published in 1937, Tenant for Death is the first novel by Cyril Hare, one of the best-loved Golden Age crime writers. Two young estate agent's clerks are sent to check an inventory on a house in Daylesford Gardens, South Kensington. Upon arrival, they find an unlisted item - a corpse. Furthermore, the mysterious tenant, Colin James, has disappeared.
  • Tenant for Death

    Cyril Hare

    (Dales Large Print, Feb. 15, 2008)
    None
  • Tenant for Death

    Cyril Hare

    (House of Stratus Ltd, Jan. 1, 2001)
    An Inspector Mallett mystery - Daylesford Gardens, South Kensington, is an unlikely address for the discovery of death by strangulation. Even more unusual is that the house does not belong to the deceased financier. In the meantime, the mysterious tenant, Colin James, has disappeared. Inspector Mallett of Scotland Yard is brought in to unravel a complicated trail.
  • TENANT FOR DEATH

    Cyril Hare

    (Penguin Books Ltd, in assoc. with Faber & Faber, July 6, 1955)
    None
  • Tenant for death

    Cyril HARE

    (Penguin Books, July 6, 1960)
    Tenant for Death: 1081
  • Tenant for Death

    Cyril Hare

    (Perennial, July 6, 1982)
    None
  • Tenant for death

    Cyril HARE

    (Faber and Faber, July 6, 1937)
    None