Sexton Blake Versus the Master Crooks Audiobook By Mark Hodder cover art

Sexton Blake Versus the Master Crooks

Sexton Blake Library, Book 2

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Sexton Blake Versus the Master Crooks

By: Mark Hodder
Narrated by: Colin Mace
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About this listen

Brought to you by Penguin.

Murderers, con men and thieves.

A new breed of villain has risen, possessed of extraordinary intellect and violence. Only the brilliant mind and courage of Sexton Blake, scourge of the criminal world, can stop them, in these three classic stories, collected together in one volume for the first time.

From the streets of London to the catacombs of Paris, join Blake as he pits his wits against bank robbers, impostors and kidnappers, duels with swords and pursues his foes by any means necessary.

The Case of the Man in Motley by Anthony Skene (George N. Philips) (1919). Sexton Blake literally crosses swords with the most stylish of his enemies, engages in a car chase, discovers a murdered clown, fights on the brink of an incinerator and recovers a stolen diamond.

Prince Pretence by Lewis Jackson (Jack Lewis) (1921). A labour leader is abducted and impersonated by Leon Kestrel, the French lottery is won, Sexton Blake's efforts are sabotaged and he is arrested, an imposter is exposed, a master crook is caught, a grotesque dwarf is visited, Tinker is kidnapped for ransom and threatened with being walled up in the Paris catacombs, Blake comes to the rescue and the villains, though defeated, escape.

The Wonder Man's Challenge by Edwy Searles Brooks (1921). Waldo the Wonder-Man robs a bank, climbs a sheer wall, walks a tightrope, steals a biplane and a necklace and challenges Sexton Blake to catch him. Blake puts Pedro on the trail, spots a deception and has a confrontation in a pub. Tinker picks a pocket. Waldo climbs up a chimney, swings onto a train and flees defeated.

©2020 Mark Hodder (P)2020 Penguin Audio and Rebellion Publishing
Crime Fiction Detective Fiction Historical Mystery Traditional Detectives Disappearance France Transportation
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What listeners say about Sexton Blake Versus the Master Crooks

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Entertaining and Interesting

This, for me, was more enjoyable than the previous book, and an interesting insight into the post 1st world war pulp fiction. The stories are adventurous in nature, the Master Crooks feel like the forerunners of the likes of Batman's collection of villains. Good pulpy fun.

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Sexton Blake is my favorite detective!

When you start this you will want to binge listen.I hope they do many more audiobooks of this underrated character.It ran from 1894 till around 1970.Adults will enjoy the stories every bit as much as younger people.The writing is not juvenile. Take my advice and you might discover that the other resident of Baker St.is your favorite too! He was called the poor man"s Sherlock Holmes-don't believe it.

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1 person found this helpful