About the Author:
Francis Henry Durbridge was born in Hull, Yorkshire, in 1912 and was educated at Bradford Grammar School. He was encouraged at an early age to write by his English teacher and went on to read English at Birmingham University. Whilst an undergraduate he started to develop the radio play format for which he first became known. At the age of twenty one he sold a play to the BBC and continued to write following his graduation whilst working as a stockbroker's clerk. In 1938, by this time writing full time, he created the character Paul Temple, a crime novelist and detective. With Steve Trent, a Fleet Street journalist and later his wife, Temple solved numerous crimes. Durbridge's style was very much in the mode of the earlier 'Golden Age' middle class amateur detectives . The first book, Send for Paul Temple, was written with John Thewes as the novelisation of a radio serial. Many others followed and they were hugely successful until the last of the series was completed in 1968. In 1969, the Paul Temple series was adapted for television and four of the adventures, prior to this, had been adapted for cinema, albeit with less success than radio and TV. He also invented a new character, Tim Frazer, an undercover agent who appeared in both novels and as a TV series. Francis Durbridge also wrote for the stage and continued doing so up until 1991, when Sweet Revenge was completed. Additionally, he wrote over twenty other well received novels, most of which were on the general subject of crime. The last, Fatal Encounter, was published after his death in 1998.
From AudioFile:
Paul Temple and his wife, Steve, quietly investigate the disappearance of two boys in rural Yorkshire. Just before they arrive in Yorkshire, the father of the boys is killed. Throughout their preliminary inquiries the name Curzon keeps coming up. Their hastily constructed holiday to Steve's childhood county provides a thinly veiled excuse for poking around in the country gentry's business, and they quickly become entangled in local intrigues and petty jealousies. Laurence Kennedy narrates this intense mystery with crisp British accents that allow the listener to easily differentiate the characters. The tension is palpable as the investigation heats up. This 1971 mystery holds up well against other British whodunits. M.B.K. © AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine
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