Nigel Strangeways must delve into a beautiful victim's past to solve this tragedy.
Sex. Money. Drugs. Take your choice.
In middle of a cold snap, with snow swirling round the imposing Easterham Manor, Nigel and Georgia Strangeways enter the warmth of the Victorian estate. But upon their arrival, the couple quickly learn that all is not as cozy as it seems. The whole house is pervaded by a sense of foreboding: a room is haunted, the cat is possessed, and the specter of the enigmatic Elizabeth Restorick looms.
Confounded by the guests’ strange reactions to the very mention of Elizabeth’s name, Nigel never gets the chance to form his own opinion of the young woman. The next morning, Elizabeth Restorick is found hanged and naked in her room, a hint of a smile playing on her painted lips.
Could her apparent suicide be more than just that? Would this beautiful girl, sensuous, compassionate, full of vitality, have taken her own life? Or did someone take it from her?
With too many loose ends to count, planted evidence, and motives mounting, Nigel must delve into Miss Restorick’s colourful past to solve this tragic mystery.
The Corpse in the Snowman was originally published in 1941 as The Case of the Abominable Snowman.
Praise for Nicholas Blake and The Corpse in the Snowman
“If you like a puzzle and good writing, Blake is your man.” — Reader Review
“He is in the front rank of contemporary detective novelists.” — Spectator
“Like Dorothy Sayers, he peoples his stage with people who would hold the attention, murder or no murder.” — The Times
“A really first-class writer.” — Manchester Guardian
“Nothing that Nicholas Blake writes is without distinction.” — Christopher Pym
“What a master of the thriller he is.” — Yorkshire Evening Post
“His plots are ingenious.” — Times Literary Supplement
“A master of detective fiction.” — Daily Telegraph
“The Nicholas Blake books are something quite by themselves in English detective fiction.” — Elizabeth Bowen