Ursula P Archer

Five

A woman is found murdered. Tattooed on her feet is a strange combination of numbers and letters.

Map co-ordinates. The start of a sinister treasure hunt by a twisted killer.

Detective Beatrice Kaspary must risk all she has to uncover the killer in a terrifying game of cat-and-mouse.

Boris Akunin

Murder on the Leviathan

Erast Fandorin

### Amazon.com Review

Usually, crime writers who give birth to protagonists deserving of future series want to feature those characters as prominently as possible in subsequent installments. Not so Boris Akunin, who succeeds his celebrated first novel about daring 19th-century Russian sleuth Erast Fandorin, __, with the less inventive *Murder on the Leviathan*, in which the now former Moscow investigator competes for center stage with a swell-headed French police commissioner, a crafty adventuress boasting more than her fair share of aliases, and a luxurious steamship that appears fated for deliberate destruction in the Indian Ocean.

Following the 1878 murders of British aristocrat Lord Littleby and his servants on Paris's fashionable Rue de Grenelle, Gustave Gauche, "Investigator for Especially Important Crimes," boards the double-engined, six-masted *Leviathan* on its maiden voyage from England to India. He's on the lookout for first-class passengers missing their specially made gold whale badges--one of which Littleby had yanked from his attacker before he died. However, this trap fails: several travelers are badgeless, and still others make equally good candidates for Littleby's slayer, including a demented baronet, a dubious Japanese army officer, a pregnant and loquacious Swiss banker's wife, and a suave Russian diplomat headed for Japan. That last is of course Fandorin, still recovering two years later from the events related in *The Winter Queen*. Like a lesser Hercule Poirot, "papa" Gauche grills these suspects, all of whom harbor secrets, and occasionally lays blame for Paris's "crime of the century" before one or another of them--only to have the hyper-perceptive Fandorin deflate his arguments. It takes many leagues of ocean, several more deaths, and a superfluity of overlong recollections by the shipmates before a solution to this twisted case emerges from the facts of Littleby's killing and the concurrent theft of a valuable Indian artifact from his mansion.

Like the best Golden Age nautical mysteries, *Murder on the Leviathan* finds its drama in the escalating tensions between a small circle of too-tight-quartered passengers, and draws its humor from their over-mannered behavior and individual eccentricities. Trouble is, Akunin (the pseudonym of Russian philologist Grigory Chkhartishvili) doesn't exceed expectations of what can be done within those traditions. *--J. Kingston Pierce*

### From Publishers Weekly

Akunin writes like a hybrid of Caleb Carr, Agatha Christie and Elizabeth Peters in his second mystery to be published in the U.S., set on the maiden voyage of the British luxury ship *Leviathan*, en route to India in the spring of 1878. Akunin's young Russian detective/diplomat protagonist, Erast Fandorin, has matured considerably since his debut in last year's highly praised *The Winter Queen*, set in 1876, and proves a worthy foil to French police commissioner Gustave Gauche, who boards the *Leviathan* because a clue suggests that one of the passengers murdered a wealthy British aristocrat, seven servants and two children in his Paris home and stole priceless Indian treasures. The intuitive, methodical Fandorin, who joins the ship at Port Said, soon slyly takes over the investigation and comes up with an eclectic group of suspects, all with secrets to hide, whom Gauche assigns to the same dining room. The company recite humorous or instructive stories that slow down the action but eventually relate to the identification of the killer. Gauche offers at least four solutions to the crimes, but in each case Fandorin debates or debunks his reasoning. The atmospheric historical detail gives depth to the twisting plot, while the ruthless yet poignant arch villain makes up for a cast of mostly cardboard characters. Readers disappointed by the lack of background on Fandorin will find plenty in *The Winter Queen*.

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Boris Akunin

Special Assignments

Erast Fandorin

SUMMARY:

In Special Assignments, Erast Fandorin, nineteenth-century Russia's suavest sleuth, faces two formidable new foes: One steals outrageous sums of money, the other takes lives. "The Jack of Spades" is a civilized swindler who has conned thousands of rubles from Moscow's residents including Fandorin's own boss, Prince Dolgorukoi. To catch him, Fandorin and his new assistant, timid young policeman Anisii Tulipov, must don almost as many disguises as the grifter does himself. "The Decorator" is a different case altogether: A savage serial killer who believes he "cleans" the women he mutilates and takes his orders from on high, he must be given Fandorin's most serious attentions. Peopled by a rich cast of eccentric characters, and with plots that are as surprising as they are inventive,Special Assignmentswill delight Akunin's many fans, while challenging the gentleman sleuth's brilliant powers of detection. Praise from England: "Boris Akunin's wit and invention are a source of constant wonder." Evening Standard "[Fandorin is] a debonair combo of Sherlock Holmes, D'Artagnan and most of the soulful heroes of Russian literature. . . . This pair of perfectly balanced stories permit the character of Fandorin to grow." The Sunday Telegraph "Agatha Christie meets James Bond: [Akunin's] plots are intricate and tantalizing. . . . [These stories] are unputdownable and great fun." Sunday Express "The beguiling, super-brainy, sexy, unpredictable Fandorin is a creation like no other in crime fiction." The Times

Boris Akunin

The State Counsellor

Erast Fandorin

SUMMARY:

General Khrapov, newly appointed Governor-General of Siberia and soon-to-be Minister of the Interior, is murdered in his official saloon carriage on his way from St Petersburg to Moscow.The killer, disguised as Fandorin, leaves a knife thrust up to the hilt in his victim's chest and escapes through the window of the carriage. Can Fandorin escape suspicion?A battle of wills and ideals, revolutionaries and traditionalists and good versus evil.

Boris Akunin

The Coronation

Erast Fandorin

Grand Duke Georgii Alexandrovich arrives in Moscow for the coronation, accompanied by three of his children and their alluring governess, Mademoiselle Declique. During an afternoon stroll, daughter Xenia is dragged away by bandits, only to be rescued by an elegant gentleman and his oriental sidekick. The passing heroes introduce themselves as Fandorin and Masa, but panic ensues when they realise that four-year old Mikhail has been snatched in the confusion.A ransom letter arrives from Dr Lind, an international criminal and the Moriarty to Fandorin's Sherlock Holmes. The letter demands the handover of the Count Orlov, an enormous diamond on the royal sceptre which is due to play a part in the coronation. Fandorin suggests that the value of the stone is paid in 'installments', buying the party a week to ensure the young boy's safe return. But can the gentleman detective find Mikhail in time, or will the Grand Duke's son meet with the same gruesome fate as Lind's last abductee - whom Fandorin could do nothing to save? Will Fandorin succumb to the affections of Xenia? And why is he falling to his death on the very first page? Our inimitable hero returns in a tantalisingly closely-matched battle of wills and of wiles.

Boris Akunin

She Lover of Death

Erast Fandorin

There's been rising concern in Moscow over a wave of suicides among the city's young bohemians. An intrepid newspaper reporter, Zhemailo, begins to uncover the truth behind the phenomenon - that the victims are linked by a secret society, the Lovers of Death. But Zhemailo is not the only investigator hot on the heels of these disciples of the occult. Little do they realise that the latest 'convert' to their secret society, assuming the alias of a Japanese prince, is none other than Erast Fandorin. But when a young and naïve provincial woman, Masha Mironova, becomes embroiled in the society, and Zhemalio dies a mysterious death, Fandorin must do more than merely infiltrate and observe. Especially when the spin of the Russian roulette wheel decrees that our dashing hero be the next to die by his own hand. Can Fandorin fake his own demise, all while outwitting the cult's dastardly leader?

Boris Akunin

He Lover of Death

Erast Fandorin

Akunin goes noir as Fandorin meets bandits! Senka Skorikov, orphan and urchin, has been abandoned to the murky world of Moscow’s gangster district. While picking a pocket or two, he glimpses the most beautiful woman he has ever seen, and joins the gang of her overlord lover, The Prince, so desperate he is to meet her. Senka climbs the criminal ranks, uncovering a stash of precious metal, and gradually capturing the heart of his beloved Death - so named for the life expectancy of her lovers. But as the bandit community balks at his success on both fronts, threats on his life begin to pour in.

A dandy and his ‘Chinese’ sidekick seem to be taking an inordinate interest in Senka’s welfare, and it becomes clear that those threatening Senka are linked to a spate of murders, grizzly even by underworld standards. Fandorin must unweave a tangled web of narcotics, false identities and organised crime - but can he survive an encounter with the ever-alluring Death unscathed? Find out in the darkest Fandorin to date!

Boris Akunin

Radca stanu

Jest rok 1891. Detektyw Fandorin rozpracuje grupę bojową, zabijającą najwyższych urzędników carskiej ochrany. Kim są mordercy? Do czego dążą? Jak złapać szefa grupy, tajemniczego Grina? Kto kryje się pod inicjałami „T.G”? Jak zwykle u Akunina kapitalna intryga sensacyjna idzie w parze z doskonale odmalowanym tłem historyczno-obyczajowym, tym razem poświęconym „rewolucyjnemu podziemiu”, które niebawem miało zmienić Rosję...

Marcel Aymé

Les contes du chat perché

« Comme le loup protestait de ses bonnes intentions, elle lui jeta par le nez :

— Et l'agneau, alors ?… Oui, l'agneau que vous avez mangé ?

Le loup n'en fut pas démonté.

— L'agneau que j'ai mangé, dit-il. Lequel ?

— Comment, vous en avez donc mangé plusieurs ! s'écria Delphine. Eh bien ! C'est du joli !

— Mais naturellement que j'en ai mangé plusieurs. Je ne vois pas où est le mal… Vous en mangez bien, vous ! »

Né à Joigny dans l'Yonne en 1902, Marcel Aymé a été élevé par ses grands-parents maternels, dans le Jura. L'école ne le passionne guère, il préfère se promener ou lire. Il obtient malgré tout son bac à 17 ans, puis hésite à devenir ingénieur, mais une grave maladie l'empêche de poursuivre ses études. Après son service militaire, il monte à Paris, où il va exercer toutes sortes de métiers : journaliste, manœuvre, camelot… En 1926, son premier roman, « Brûlebois », le fait connaître. C'est après le succès de « La Jument verte », en 1933, qu'il peut se consacrer totalement à l'écriture. Le premier recueil des célèbres « Contes du chat perché » est publié en 1934 et le « Passe-muraille » en 1943. Son ironie, son humour caustique, sa truculence ont fait de Marcel Aymé un écrivain très populaire. Auteur d'une vingtaine de romans, de dizaine de nouvelles, d'essais, de scénarios et de nombreuses pièces de théâtre, il est mort à Paris, en 1967.

Boris Akunin

Lewiatan

Jest rok . W dochodzi do zbrodni, w której dla złotego posążka ginie właściciel kolekcji antyków indyjskich, siedem osób służby i dwójka dzieci. Wszyscy z wyjątkiem kolekcjonera zostają zabici zastrzykiem trucizny. Na miejscu zbrodni policja znajduje jedyny ślad – złotą przywieszkę pasażera pierwszej klasy pierwszego rejsu nowego ekskluzywnego statku „Lewiatan”, płynącego w dziewiczy rejs do . Na pokładzie statku Gauche, komisarz paryskiej policji, podejrzewa o dokonanie zbrodni wszystkich pasażerów nieposiadających przywieszki. Na nieszczęście Erast Fandorin, delegowany na placówkę do Japonii, płynie Lewiatanem i nie afiszuje się ze swoją przywieszką, w związku z czym również jest podejrzany o popełnienie przestępstwa…

Boris Akunun

Türkisches Gambit

Erast Fandorin

Im Fall »Türkisches Gambit« hilft ein geheimnisvoller Fremder der hübschen Warja 1877 in höchster Not: In den Wirren des russisch-türkischen Krieges sitzt sie in Männerkleidern in einem mehr als zweifelhaften Gasthaus an der bulgarisch-türkischen Grenze, und ihr Kutscher ist mit Pferd, Wagen, ihren Papieren sowie ihren ganzen Habseligkeiten verschwunden. Der im Auftrag des russischen Geheimdienstes reisende Fandorin hilft Warja fürs erste aus der Patsche, doch gerät sie an seiner Seite in gefährliche, aber auch sehr reizvolle Abenteuer ...

Richard Adams

The Plague Dogs

A lyrical, engrossing tale, by the author of , Richard Adams creates a lyrical and engrossing tale, a remarkable journey into the hearts and minds of two canine heroes, Snitter and Rowf, fugitives from the horrors of an animal research center who escape into the isolation—and terror—of the wilderness.

Linda Andrews

Extinction Level Event

Redaction

Six months after an Influenza Pandemic swept across the globe, the world is starting to emerge from quarantine. But Pestilence Free Day is short-lived. For an unseen enemy has just been unleashed.

Five people. Seven days.

A brilliant scientist with an apocalyptic forecast

A soldier that needs an enemy to fight

A college student venturing into a changed world

An insurance salesman who exploits every opportunity

A juvenile delinquent desperate to leave his past behind

Redaction: Humanity is about to be erased from the Book of Life.

Linda Andrews

The Meltdown

Redaction

Seven days after a world-wide anthrax attack:

Governments have fallen.

Water and food are scarce.

And ten thousand tons of spent nuclear fuel rods are ready to spew radiation around the globe.

Survivors must battle nature and each other to reach safety before the Earth's surface is sterilized.

Boris Akunin

KORONACJA,czyli ostatni z Romanowów

Podczas przygotowań do koronacji cara Mikołaja II porwany zostaje syn Wielkiego Ksiecia Georgija Aleksandrowicza. Porywacz jako okupu żąda `Orłowa`. Ten bezcenny brylant zdobiący berło jest narodową świętością. Fandorin wie, że zbrodniarz nie zwykł zostawiać swych ofiar przy życiu. Musi więc wygrać wyścig z czasem.

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