Description

Book Synopsis

“My accidents can’t be accidental. Very well, there’s only one thing they can be–and that’s attempted murder.”

Archy Mitfold had always loved a mystery, but he never expected to take the lead role in a thriller. Yet there was no doubt in his mind that someone was trying to kill him. First there was the narrow miss on Trumpeter’s Row, where a car accelerated straight at him. Then there were the chocolates Archy received on his birthday—with an unsigned card—that made him ill. Most recent was the sharp push in the back that almost sent him sprawling in front of an oncoming commuter train. What does Archy know that someone is willing to kill for? And does the recent kidnapping of millionaire Sampson Vick have anything to do with his accidents? Or is all this just the sign of self-absorbed and histrionic young man? Before long, Chief Inspector Dan Pardoe is called to investigate and untangles more than one mystery in the process.

A Deed Without a Name has a well-realised and atmospheric setting during England’s “phony war” period in 1939.



Trade Review

“Curiosity is the test of detective stories. If it is continually whetted all faults can be forgiven. If it is not, then all graces of style and character tend to remove the novel into another class. Comparatively few of the goods that bear the label are “detective” through and through; the boys’ book of adventure, the nursemaids’ novelette, the tale of mystery and terror, the drawing-room melodrama, the tough school’s callisthenics and all other types of popular fiction mongrelize the strain.

There is almost a thrill of discovery in recognizing the pure breed and this is what Miss Bowers gives us in “A Deed Without A Name.” She begins quietly and unpromisingly with a young man of Chelsea whose tales of poisoned chocolates, a push in the back on a railway platform and a narrow escape from being run down in the street suggest a persecution complex or self-dramatization that he will grow out of. Of course, he would climb a wall and let himself in by a back-door rather than enter his home in the usual way. And then the crimes begin. Miss Bowers’ story is exciting because it steers clear of familiar ways. There is no Fuss over detectives’ personal appearance or idiosyncrasies and though she cannot overcome the prevailing passion for apt quotations she keeps them for chapter headings instead of dialogue. Her business is strictly the unravelling of a murder mystery. Plodding police methods are unassisted by “hunches”, amateur or professional. The task is tackled like washing-day by constable, sergeant and inspector, acting on information received from a prying housemaid. Whether you spot the guilty party or not make little difference. The very nature of the crime has an interest that forbids the skipping of odd chapters. Miss Bowers brings a fresh box of tricks on the stage just when the audience was becoming jaded. Her illusions may amount to the old business of vanishing live ‘uns and producing dead ‘uns, but they seem new. She ranks with the best.”

-- The Times Literary Supplement

Good intellectual titillator in an adroit follow-up of Shadows Before. Innocuous Archy Mitford nosed into another murder and paid the price. Slow moving Pardoe of the Yard pulverizes all the clues -- and runs down blackmail into kidnapping into murder -- and eventually gets his man.

* Kirkus Reviews *

In "A Deed Without a Name" Miss Dorothy Bowers tells of the murder during the black-out of a young man already the victim of mysterious attempts on his life, of the disappearance of a millionaire, and shows, with a high degree of constructive skill, how Chief Inspector Pardoe adds one faint indication to another to prove that the two crimes are closely connected. Probably most readers will soon guess the identity of the murderer, but the clues that provide the solution to the mystery are devised and followed up with an ingenuity certain to keep those readers always interested. Especially admirable is the way in which the murderer's name is given early in the story - for those, that is, who have the necessary insight and knowledge.

-- E.R. Punshon * Crime & Mystery *

Table of Contents

Introduction
I Riddle-Me-Ree
II A Visit and a Visitor
III Ding Dong Bell
IV Quest
V Rope's End
VI Witches' Sabbath
VII Curious Behaviour of a Young Man
VIII A Word of Mr. Vick
IX At the Sign of the Juniper
X - Of Accidents
XI - Of Incidents
XII Salt is Doubtful
XIII Pardoe is Unsuccessful
XIV The Most Unlikely Person
XV At Mulberry Fountain
XVI The Most Likely Person
XVII At the Cinema
XVIII Gas
XIX Vacant Possession
XX Last Word of Mr. Vick
XXI A Bump on the Head
XXII Leaves from a Diary
XXIII The Bird

A Deed Without a Name

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Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 3 Jan 2026.

A Paperback / softback by Dorothy Bowers

1 in stock


    View other formats and editions of A Deed Without a Name by Dorothy Bowers

    Publisher: Moonstone Press
    Publication Date: 00/01/2019
    ISBN13: 9781899000128, 978-1899000128
    ISBN10: 1899000127

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    “My accidents can’t be accidental. Very well, there’s only one thing they can be–and that’s attempted murder.”

    Archy Mitfold had always loved a mystery, but he never expected to take the lead role in a thriller. Yet there was no doubt in his mind that someone was trying to kill him. First there was the narrow miss on Trumpeter’s Row, where a car accelerated straight at him. Then there were the chocolates Archy received on his birthday—with an unsigned card—that made him ill. Most recent was the sharp push in the back that almost sent him sprawling in front of an oncoming commuter train. What does Archy know that someone is willing to kill for? And does the recent kidnapping of millionaire Sampson Vick have anything to do with his accidents? Or is all this just the sign of self-absorbed and histrionic young man? Before long, Chief Inspector Dan Pardoe is called to investigate and untangles more than one mystery in the process.

    A Deed Without a Name has a well-realised and atmospheric setting during England’s “phony war” period in 1939.



    Trade Review

    “Curiosity is the test of detective stories. If it is continually whetted all faults can be forgiven. If it is not, then all graces of style and character tend to remove the novel into another class. Comparatively few of the goods that bear the label are “detective” through and through; the boys’ book of adventure, the nursemaids’ novelette, the tale of mystery and terror, the drawing-room melodrama, the tough school’s callisthenics and all other types of popular fiction mongrelize the strain.

    There is almost a thrill of discovery in recognizing the pure breed and this is what Miss Bowers gives us in “A Deed Without A Name.” She begins quietly and unpromisingly with a young man of Chelsea whose tales of poisoned chocolates, a push in the back on a railway platform and a narrow escape from being run down in the street suggest a persecution complex or self-dramatization that he will grow out of. Of course, he would climb a wall and let himself in by a back-door rather than enter his home in the usual way. And then the crimes begin. Miss Bowers’ story is exciting because it steers clear of familiar ways. There is no Fuss over detectives’ personal appearance or idiosyncrasies and though she cannot overcome the prevailing passion for apt quotations she keeps them for chapter headings instead of dialogue. Her business is strictly the unravelling of a murder mystery. Plodding police methods are unassisted by “hunches”, amateur or professional. The task is tackled like washing-day by constable, sergeant and inspector, acting on information received from a prying housemaid. Whether you spot the guilty party or not make little difference. The very nature of the crime has an interest that forbids the skipping of odd chapters. Miss Bowers brings a fresh box of tricks on the stage just when the audience was becoming jaded. Her illusions may amount to the old business of vanishing live ‘uns and producing dead ‘uns, but they seem new. She ranks with the best.”

    -- The Times Literary Supplement

    Good intellectual titillator in an adroit follow-up of Shadows Before. Innocuous Archy Mitford nosed into another murder and paid the price. Slow moving Pardoe of the Yard pulverizes all the clues -- and runs down blackmail into kidnapping into murder -- and eventually gets his man.

    * Kirkus Reviews *

    In "A Deed Without a Name" Miss Dorothy Bowers tells of the murder during the black-out of a young man already the victim of mysterious attempts on his life, of the disappearance of a millionaire, and shows, with a high degree of constructive skill, how Chief Inspector Pardoe adds one faint indication to another to prove that the two crimes are closely connected. Probably most readers will soon guess the identity of the murderer, but the clues that provide the solution to the mystery are devised and followed up with an ingenuity certain to keep those readers always interested. Especially admirable is the way in which the murderer's name is given early in the story - for those, that is, who have the necessary insight and knowledge.

    -- E.R. Punshon * Crime & Mystery *

    Table of Contents

    Introduction
    I Riddle-Me-Ree
    II A Visit and a Visitor
    III Ding Dong Bell
    IV Quest
    V Rope's End
    VI Witches' Sabbath
    VII Curious Behaviour of a Young Man
    VIII A Word of Mr. Vick
    IX At the Sign of the Juniper
    X - Of Accidents
    XI - Of Incidents
    XII Salt is Doubtful
    XIII Pardoe is Unsuccessful
    XIV The Most Unlikely Person
    XV At Mulberry Fountain
    XVI The Most Likely Person
    XVII At the Cinema
    XVIII Gas
    XIX Vacant Possession
    XX Last Word of Mr. Vick
    XXI A Bump on the Head
    XXII Leaves from a Diary
    XXIII The Bird

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