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The Mysterious Mr. Badman

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The note read:
“Will the gentleman who took by mistake a copy of Bunyan’s Life and Death of Mr. Badman, return it as soon as possible, as the book is in demand.�

On holiday in Keldstone visiting his nephew, Jim, blanket manufacturer Athelstan Digby agrees to look after the old bookshop on the ground floor of his lodgings while his hosts are away. On the first day of his tenure, a vicar, a chauffeur and an out-of-town stranger enquire after The Life and Death of Mr. Badman by John Bunyan. When a copy mysteriously arrives at the shop in a bundle of books brought in by a young scamp, and is subsequently stolen, Digby moves to investigate the significance of the book along with his nephew, and the two are soon embroiled in a case in which the stakes have risen from antiquarian book-pinching to ruthless murder.

First published in a limited run in 1934, this exceedingly rare and fast-paced bibliomystery set against the landscapes of Yorkshire is long overdue its return to print.

204 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1934

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About the author

W.F. Harvey

201Ìýbooks30Ìýfollowers
William Fryer Harvey was an English writer of short stories, most notably in the macabre and horror genres. Among his best-known stories are "August Heat" and "The Beast with Five Fingers", described by horror historian Les Daniels as "minor masterpieces".

Born into a wealthy Quaker family in Yorkshire, he attended the Quaker schools at Bootham in Yorkshire and at Leighton Park in Reading before going on to Balliol College, Oxford. He took a degree in medicine at Leeds. Ill health dogged him, however, and he devoted himself to personal projects such as his first book of short stories, Midnight House (1910).

In World War I he initially joined the Friends' Ambulance Unit, but later served as a surgeon-lieutenant in the Royal Navy, and received the Albert Medal for Lifesaving.[4] Lung damage received during the rescue leading to the award troubled him for the rest of his life, but he continued to write both short stories and his cheerful and good-natured memoir We Were Seven.

Harvey was a practicising Quaker.

Before the war he had shown interest in adult education, on the staff of the Working Men's College, Fircroft, Selly Oak, Birmingham. He returned to Fircroft in 1920, becoming Warden, but by 1925 ill-health forced his retirement. In 1928 he published a second collection of short stories, The Beast with Five Fingers, and in 1933 he published a third, Moods and Tenses. He lived in Switzerland with his wife for much of this time, but nostalgia for his home country caused his return to England. He moved to Letchworth in 1935 and died there in 1937 at the age of 52. After a funeral service at the local Friends Meeting House Harvey was buried in the churchyard of St Mary the Virgin in Old Letchworth.

The release of the film The Beast with Five Fingers (1946), directed by Robert Florey and starring Peter Lorre, inspired by what was perhaps his most famous and praised short story, caused a resurgence of interest in Harvey's work. In 1951 a posthumous fourth collection of his stories, The Arm of Mrs Egan and Other Stories, appeared, including a set of twelve stories left in manuscript at the time of his death, headed "Twelve Strange Cases".

In 2009 Wordsworth Editions printed an omnibus volume of Harvey's stories, titled The Beast with Five Fingers, in its Tales of Mystery and the Supernatural series (ISBN 978-1-84022-179-4). The volume contains 45 stories and an introduction by David Stuart Davies.

[]

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5 stars
84 (17%)
4 stars
153 (32%)
3 stars
195 (41%)
2 stars
32 (6%)
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7 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 72 reviews
Profile Image for Leah.
1,631 reviews273 followers
March 19, 2023
Blackmail and murder�

Athelstan Digby is holidaying in Keldstone, in Yorkshire, where his young nephew Jim is thinking of buying the local doctor’s practice. Digby is lodging with a couple who own the local bookshop and when they both want to attend a funeral one afternoon, Digby offers to look after the shop for them. During the course of the afternoon three different customers all come in looking for the same book � not the latest bestseller, but a rather obscure book by Bunyan called The Life and Death of Mr Badman. Digby can’t help since the shop doesn’t have a copy, but he’s intrigued. And he’s even more intrigued when a boy comes in later in the day with a bunch of books to sell, one of which just happens to be Mr Badman�

This is another rather quirky one from the British Library � they seem to be going through a little spate of really obscure one-off books at the moment. Billed as a bibliomystery, in fact the Bunyan book and the bookshop have very little to do with the plot once the initial set-up is done. The real mystery concerns a letter found inside the book, which alerts Digby to the idea that a high-ranking politician may be being blackmailed. Reluctant to involve the police, he and his nephew Jim, along with a girl whom Jim is in the process of falling for, set out to investigate, with the idea of putting a stop to the blackmail. But then a man is found dead � one of the men who’d been looking for the book � and while the police think it was suicide, Digby, with his knowledge of the letter, suspects it was murder.

I found I had a bit of an issue with the moral stance the author seems to take over the blackmail. I don’t want to go too deeply into it for fear of spoilers, but I felt that the victim of the blackmail didn’t deserve Digby’s efforts to keep his name free of scandal. We live in a less deferential society now, and the idea of covering up dodgy behaviour simply because the dodger happens to be a high-ranking politician is more jarring than perhaps it was back then. The result was that I rather hoped the “good guys� would fail in their cover-up, so wasn’t able to wholeheartedly cheer them on.

Otherwise, however, I found it quite an entertaining read. Both Digby and Jim are likeable characters and it was a good contrast to have one old and one young. Digby did the thinking while Jim took care of the action side. The girl, Diana, is a good character too, who plays an active part in the investigation. The plot is a kind of mix of mystery and thriller that rattles along at a steady pace, which helps to disguise the inconsistencies, plot-holes, coincidences and basic lack of credibility! I quickly decided the best way was to avoid analysing it too deeply and simply go with the flow, which was made easier by the general quality of the writing.

Not one that will go down as a classic of the genre, then, but an enjoyable enough way to fill a few hours. 3½ stars for me, so rounded up.

NB This book was provided for review by the publisher, the British Library.

239 reviews
April 5, 2023
Entretenido, sin más. Para distraerse una tarde o dos, porque se lee muy rápido.

- Lo mejor: el señor Digby.

- Lo peor: que sabes quien es el malo como a un tercio de acabar el libro, y todo se reduce a descubrir si logran pararle y cómo.
Profile Image for ´³Ã¼°ù²µ±ð²Ô.
AuthorÌý2 books59 followers
October 9, 2023
Ein sehr schöner Klassiker, der sich gemächlich entwickelt, aber am Ende eine feine Spannung aufbaut. Das ungewöhnliche Ermittlertrio hatte Charme und machte Lust auf einen weiteren 'Harvey'. Wieder beweist sich, was für eine Fundgrube die Crime Classics-Reihe der British Library ist. Immer auch lesenswert sind die Einführungen von Herausgeber Martin Edwards.
Profile Image for José Nebreda.
AuthorÌý18 books127 followers
June 3, 2021
Flojito, flojito, tan flojito que lo dejé cuando sólo me quedaban 60 páginas. Pero es que resultaba todo tan aburrido, tan lento y previsible que ni me apetecía seguir. Qué le vamos a hacer. No todos los misterios victorianos y eduardianos son tan misteriosos.
Profile Image for Robyn.
1,976 reviews
May 12, 2024
Gift card | I would have read a whole series of Mr Digby | In truth this was maybe not really four stars, but the last few classic cozies I've read have been disappointments, and I've had a terrible week, so to end it with a character as delightful as Digby was a real joy. No twists, no big reveals, and it takes a bit to get into its stride, but I liked it.

Note one instance of common-to-the-era bigotry toward Asians, unedited, and one use of the milder of the two "n" words, edited.
Profile Image for Chavi.
116 reviews
June 19, 2023
Interesting premise, boring book.
At first I did give it the benefit of doubt and thought it was me and not the book, but by the end of it, I was pretty sure that it, in fact, was the book.
Profile Image for EuroHackie.
893 reviews17 followers
February 6, 2024
3.5 stars. This is a fun little romp of a story, at the center of which is the rather eccentric Athelstan Digby, a blanket manufacturer. He is on holiday visiting his nephew, Jim Pickering, a physician who is considering buying a practice in rural Yorkshire. While there, Mr Digby stumbles into a very convoluted blackmail scheme that reaches to the highest levels of government, and unfortunately includes murder.

There are a lot of twists and turns to this story; the whodunit is a very obvious Chekov's Gun character, but why is rather elusive until the very end. I'm sure it would've packed a more mighty punch in the mid-1930s; these days, it is very academic and thus, not too impressive.

Mr Digby is quite a delightful character, very clever, and is apparently the main protagonist of a series of short stories published six years before this novel first appeared. I'd definitely read more about him.
Profile Image for Maika.
269 reviews84 followers
June 6, 2021
Me esperaba mucho más de la novela. Se deja leer y poco más.
Las novelas detectivescas ambientadas en Gran Bretaña me suelen gustar mucho, pero , esta se me hizo lenta y no te mantiene en vilo durante el desarrollo.
Profile Image for Cristina.
481 reviews74 followers
February 1, 2022
No ha conseguido engancharme.
Lo tenía todo: trama, personajes, ambientación. Pero...
Una pena.
1,084 reviews15 followers
December 21, 2023
I wanted to like this book a lot more than I did, and I don't really know why.

The premise is very interesting: Athelstan Digby, a blanket maker on holiday visiting his nephew, is bored and therefore agrees to look after the bookstore for a day on the ground floor of his lodging. During that day, 3 different people all come in to the store looking for the same uncommon book. And later that day, a kid actually brings in that very book in a pile he got from a rich lady. When the book is subsequently stolen, Digby realizes there's something awry. And when one of the book searchers ends up dead, the Digby and his nephew have to figure out the secret before there's more killing.

Like I stated, it's an interesting idea, it's just that the story devolves into hide and seek with the book, and a bunch of Brits trying to blackmail / avoid being blackmailed, all while keeping to "fair play" rules. More of a story about manners and political liabilities then a bibliomystery.
Profile Image for Sonia.
728 reviews154 followers
May 9, 2021
3,5 estrellas
Reconozco que no soy objetiva con este libro, porque me encantan los "murders mysteries" británicos de corte clásico, que es justo lo que nos ofrece W.F. Harvey con este libro.
Escrita en 1934, pero ambientada en una época que no precisa, si bien parece que sea en los años 20, nos ofrece a unos personajes entrañables, especialmente el señor Digsby, y un "bibliomystery" en el que el quién lo hizo ocupa más o menos la primera mitad, para después pasar a ser una novela de "cómo paramos al malo" en la segunda.
Y si bien tiene algunas partes algo "fantasiosas", es tan entretenido y una lectura tan amable y confortable, que me ha dado justo lo que esperaba al leerlo.
Desde luego no lleva al nivel de los grandes clásicos del género, pero me ha parecido una lectura amena y entrañable.
Profile Image for David.
256 reviews1 follower
July 24, 2024
A by-the-numbers rural crime caper that is enlivened by some deft and witty writing. There is a particularly brilliant passage describing what the chief protagonist (for whom the author seems to nurture an eerily fierce affection) has in his pockets. Ignore the plot and enjoy the style.
Profile Image for Martina Sartor.
1,200 reviews38 followers
September 8, 2020
Non particolarmente riuscito. L'ambientazione di campagna prometteva bene, ma poi ci si perde in un'accozzaglia di fatti messi assieme un po' a caso.
Non c'è una vera e propria indagine sul "whodunit", dato che il colpevole si sa già a circa metà libro. Da lì in poi il giallo si trasforma in una rincorsa alla cattura dell'assassino.
Profile Image for Zoe Radley.
1,476 reviews20 followers
November 30, 2022
This was a funny, intriguing and puzzling little book. It’s more about the mystery of a book and what it might contain rather than murder. It’s also got a lot of political ramifications and a sympathetic villain who maybe a little bit more hotheaded than outright evil. This is a genuine fun and brilliant read. Would urge anyone to read it.
Profile Image for Eric.
1,493 reviews45 followers
November 16, 2022
I find it quite difficult to rate this little oddity of a detective novel by a writer better known for his macabre short stories. I found the style of writing congenial, simple and clear, while the slightly lighthearted and occasionally whimsical tone was underpinned by a much harder, very political edge and a strong moral sensibility.

It is much more complex and subtle than one would be led to believe from Martin Edwards' Introduction which, while good on the author's life and works, really has little to say about the book and its background.

One of the characters Sir Richard Mottram, is Home Secretary at the start of the story and is tipped for a move to the Foreign Office: these positions are crucial. His action in the first role lays him open to the blackmail which is fundamental to the plot and his influence in foreign policy has the potential to ruin the fortunes of another protagonist. Given that In the earlier part of his career he was involved in Irish affairs at the time of Eiri Amach na Casca and Cogadh na Saoirse, it is easy to guess at political motivations behind some of the criminal activities found in the plot.

The author's Quaker/pacifist beliefs are evident in the character of the amateur detective, Athelstan Digby, who opposes capital punishment and rearmament, the latter being very topical as the writing and publication of the novel coincided with the Geneva Disarmament Conference of 1932-34.

For me this adds interest to a plot which has a number of weaknesses. We know the mastermind behind the crimes from about the halfway point, and, while there are a few twists, it then becomes a battle of wits or rather a comedy of errors, until the case is resolved.

Overall there is a lot to be enjoyed here. The characters are well-realised, the humour is light but not fatuous, and the easy style propels the reader through some of the less believable parts of the plot.

3.75 stars.
Profile Image for Lisa Kucharski.
1,014 reviews
March 3, 2023
Very happy this book has been reprinted, the title captured my attention and the story was much more heart-warming than I anticipated. Mr. Digby goes on a little vacation and ends up following a thread of a peculiar incident of three people looking for a particular book. Digby’s son, a doctor, and a young lady join forces in trying to figure out what is going on and discover there is quite a bit at stake.

A book that has thoughtful approach to story-telling. It has action and patience and I would have loved to have had another book with Mr. Digby! It’s a mystery that includes murder, and political intrigue. It also includes quite a bit human interest as well.

Profile Image for Christina Dongowski.
231 reviews68 followers
February 18, 2023
I really enjoyed it, it’s perfect escapist reading. I especially liked the rather surprising choice for head amateur sleuth (they are a team of three), an elderly gentleman, wool merchant and an active member of the non-conformist wing of the Protestant church. There’s more political intrigue in it than bibliomystery, and it could do with more of action and speed.
Profile Image for Elsbeth Kwant.
408 reviews23 followers
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January 16, 2023
Enjoyed this mystery - concerning a book, secrets & Yorkshire moors...
Profile Image for Two Envelopes And A Phone.
315 reviews39 followers
July 20, 2023
This is an interesting novel to pick apart.

It wants to live its life as both a whodunit, and a suspense novel. But never at the same time.

For the first part, it works as a fairly promising whodunit; what is more, the little cadre of amateur sleuths are, in the early part of the book, very adept at figuring out the small assortment of sinister and dangerous villains' aims, tricks, and next moves. Smart, plucky heroes...but perhaps a little too good at anticipating creepo behaviour, and detecting sinister icebergs from mere malicious, exposed tips. So, suspense is sort of held up by the good guys handling the bad guys just fine - overall, I mean.

Then, just as it becomes clear - I would say to both the reader and the detectives, at around the same time - that this could be one of the world's easiest murder mysteries to solve, the whodunit is solved relatively early, while suspense takes monumental leap forward, because suddenly the baddies win every point. Our likeable sleuth team - splitting up -are suddenly unable to foresee a darn thing when it comes to the machinations of the villains as they attempt final schemes to procure the book everyone wants, and unable to avoid walking into violent traps. Before, the goodies did everything right and the baddies couldn't steal second base it it was brought to them with a bow around it -and then, for the last section of the novel, no mystery but plenty of suspense, because the evil-doers are bursting with brilliant schemes and the heroes don't have a clue. This was the best part of the book, as far as I'm concerned; although, even the slickest bit of skullduggery the creep team pulls was figured out by me - or at least pondered as possibility - before the hornswoggled poker-abouter smacked his forehead and realized the trick. So, yeah - even when this book was at its most mysterious, and later on at its most suspenseful, I found it easy to spot what was around the corner. Very amusing at times, even so.
Profile Image for Caroline.
201 reviews1 follower
April 26, 2024
There is the most wonderful moment in this novel near the climax of the book when Athelstan Digby needing to drive to save his nephew announces

'I want you to telephone to the nearest garage...and ask them to send their fastest car round her at once. And as soon as you have done that bring me two eggs lightly boiled, some tea and bread and butter. Be as quick as you can...the matter is urgent'

I sat on my sun lounger hooting at this quote which typified this book as classic 1930s crime writing and great fun. After all, in a matter of life and death there is always time to have a light lunch.

I adored Athelstan Digby, the most benign and twinkly eyed character who offering to look after a bookshop is astonished when 3 unconnected people come searching from an obscure John Bunyan title. Even more astonishing is when a copy of the book turns up in a collection of donated books from the library of the nearest house that same afternoon.

What follows is a brilliantly paced crime novel, featuring a car chase, blackmail, romance and a prison break. At its heart is Athlestan and his nephew Jim. Even Athelstan's profession as a blanket manufacturer comes into play, as he is able to solve a clue from his knowledge of wool-weaving. It is also a wonderful snapshot of the 1930's typified by good manners, sportsmanship and of course that cup of tea in times of panic.

I would definitely recommend reading the biography of W.F. Harvey at the start of the book, he has had a heroic life and I'm please to discover that there is another book to feature Athelstan - The Misadventures of Athelstan Digby which I will definitely be keeping an eye out for.

All in all, this was an excellent read, with an engaging investigator and a good romping crime. Maybe boiled eggs for tea tonight to celebrate dear Athelstan!
Profile Image for Jesse.
661 reviews10 followers
December 25, 2023
Enjoyable and drolly English bookish mystery that begins with three different men asking our hero, a blanket salesman (Martin Edwards notes that this is, as far as he knows, which I think means "as far as anyone knows," the only mystery novel with a blanket salesman for a hero) filling in at the local booksellers', for a John Bunyan novel. Oddly structured narratively, in that we find out who did it about halfway through, but it's not what Edwards calls an "inverted mystery," in that it doesn't start with the commission of the crime. I thought maybe there'd be a climactic revelation that the guy who we've been led to think did it actually didn't (a la the virtuoso display of solutions in Berkeley's Poisoned Chocolates Case)...but no, he did. The very English names include Wilfrid Pickles, Robert Hughes-Jones, and Euphemia Upstart, perhaps a clue that Harvey is not taking this whole endeavor entirely seriously, as are little asides like this: "Mr. Digby was emphatically a man of peace. He advocated drastic reductions on naval and military expenditure. He was not ashamed of being called a little Englander, but he was no pacifist. The present occasion was pre-eminently one that called, if not for the knuckle-duster, at least for the iron hand in the velvet glove; and in the fender he noticed a serviceable-looking poker, that might well be adapted for his purpose." Not the greatest or cleverest mystery I've ever read, but a perfectly fine diversion.
804 reviews16 followers
August 18, 2024
This 1934 mystery novel has been recently re-issued in the British Library Classic Crime series. Harvey is better known for his horror stories, but he wrote a few mysteries.

This story has a clever premise. Athelstan Digby has come to Yorkshire to visit his nephew. He agrees to look after the bookstore on the ground floor of his lodgings while his hosts attend a funeral. During the afternoon, three different men visit the store and ask if he has a copy of John Bunyon's 1680 novel, "The Life and Death of Mr. Badman". He does not, and he finds it extremely odd that he would get three seemingly unrelated requests for this obscure volume.

A young boy then comes to the store and sells a copy of the book to Digby. That night the book is stolen from the store. The next day, one of the three men who asked for the book is found dead on the moors.

The rest of the novel is not as enjoyable. There is a fairly complicated plot involving blackmail. It becomes clear pretty quickly who the villain is. There are several thriller type episodes, including a kidnapping. The ending is not very satisfying.

There is also a faint aroma of anti-Catholicism. Digby, our hero, is a strong and firm Protestant. There are some very seedy Catholics.

I suspect the book was chosen for reprinting because there is a popular fancy for "biblio-mysteries" these days. The beginning scenes at the bookstore are well done, but it plays no real part in most of the novel.
Profile Image for Eleanor.
1,000 reviews222 followers
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March 19, 2025
Delightfully subtitled “a Yorkshire bibliomystery�, this is another great premise: the splendidly named Athelstan Digby, a humble blanket manufacturer, is on holiday visiting his nephew on the North York Moors. One day he agrees to mind his landlord’s shop, which happens to sell secondhand books, and receives three separate requests for John Bunyan’s The Life and Death of Mr. Badman—not in stock until the very end of the day, when a young lad sells him a parcel of secondhand books containing that very title. Soon after, one of the customers who’d inquired for the title is found shot dead on the moor, and Athelstan—plus his doctor nephew, Jim Pickering, and the delightful Diana Conyers, who Jim seems to have met during the first world war when she was a V.A.D.—determines to investigate. This is mostly a novel about politically motivated blackmail, and less a novel about books as murder-worthy objects in their own right, but the character interactions are marvelous. I would love to read more fiction featuring Athelstan Digby; sadly I don’t think Harvey wrote any more novels including him.
21 reviews1 follower
May 1, 2023
An enjoyable anachronistic fiction

This book is full of anachronisms which show the way we, of the 21st century might have often discarded the baby with the bathwater. I mean that in removing outmoded beliefs from the hard won philosophy of our 'enlightenment', we might just have forgotten the morals that were shaped in the centuries leading up to this one.
Often depending on almost miraculous deductions the stalwart protagonists solve the dilemmas and save the day. It is hardly an 'edge of the seat' story, but nevertheless it kept my interest and because I was able to skate over the bits that made me wince, I enjoyed it, and felt a better person for having known and agreed with these characters. On the other hand it is an unlikely set of events, the characters are from a different century, a different world that no longer exists and their actions are often questionable in the legal and moral sense. This is fiction in the truest sense of the word and one wonders, was this world ever really like this.
Profile Image for Ruthiella.
1,742 reviews68 followers
November 6, 2023
Mr. Athelstan Digby is minding the bookshop for his landlord in the village of Keldstone one afternoon, when three different people come in looking for the same book which he hasn’t got on the shelves (namely Bunyan’s allegorical novel, “The Life and Death of Mr. Badman�). If that weren’t coincidence enough, that very title does show up, shortly before closing, brought in by a young man selling a stack of books his employer. Clearly there is some mystery here tied up with the book, but what? Middle aged Mr. Digby is joined in his investigations by his physician nephew Jim and the well-connected Diana Conyers.

This was a short and entertaining mystery/thriller set in the 1930s. It starts as a mystery but half way through becomes a thriller as the reader knows who they “bad guy� is and the plot becomes more a game of cat and mouse between Digby and the “other side�. While the politics and morals expressed in the novel might raise eyebrows now, I found that Mr. Digby was, in his way, a very upstanding man and true to his principles.
Profile Image for Becky.
6,000 reviews285 followers
December 26, 2023
First sentence: When at two o'clock on a sultry July afternoon Athelstan Digby undertook to keep an eye on the contents of the old bookshop in Keldstone High Street, he deliberately forgot to mind his own business.

Premise/plot: This one is a vintage mystery from the 1930s. Athelstan Digby, one of our protagonists, is on holiday. He's temporarily minding a bookshop--while the owners are away for a day (possibly one day and one night). He has THREE people come in and all ask for the same book--The Life and Death of Mr. Badman by John Bunyan. He finds this strange, strange, super-strange. Events in the small village soon reflect this, Athelstan and his nephew, Jim, soon find themselves amateur detectives trying to solve multiple crimes--including murder.

My thoughts: I LOVED, LOVED, LOVED this one. It reminded me of all the reasons I love vintage mysteries, particularly British mysteries. I enjoyed getting to know the characters. I loved the bookish plot. I loved finding a new-to-me author. Definitely recommended.
1,794 reviews39 followers
March 12, 2024
What an irresistible main character! Mr. Athelstan Digby is a respectable middle-aged blanket manufacturer, a conservative and a pacifist, a loving uncle to his young nephew, Dr. Jim Pickering, and an undemanding lodger above the Lavenders' Bookstore. When the Lavenders have to go out for the day, Mr. Digby offers to mind the store for him. And to his surprise, no fewer than 3 people, 2 of them incurring his opprobrium, come and ask for a very specific book, "The Life and Death of Mr. Badman" -which does not arrive in the bookstore until a few hours later, brought in by an errand boy and originating from a clean-out at a local worthy's bookshelves. And in that book, a rather scandalous letter is found that could get the addressee, a successful politician, into major trouble. Mr. Digby smells blackmail! But even worse: the 2 disreputable characters who asked after the book are found soon found dead, and Mr. Digby, Dr. Pickering and young Diana begin to realize they are dealing with a very wily and slippery bunch of characters.

Very enjoyable!
Profile Image for Verity W.
3,419 reviews30 followers
September 18, 2023
This is one from the thriller-y the end of the British Library Crime Classic collection. The Mysterious Mr Badman features a a mystery that starts with the nephew of a blanket manufacturer agreeing to mind the bookshop below his lodgings for an afternoon and three men coming all looking for the same book by John Bunyan. From there, it turns into a murder mystery with political overtones, the morals of which you may or may not agree with, but that will still manage to sweep you along while you’re reading it. I nearly called it a caper, but that’s not is not really the right word when there is murder involved. but think 39 steps, but with a book and a murder at the heart of it. Not bad at all.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 72 reviews

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