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Death of a Conman

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Hardcover

First published March 1, 1968

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About the author

Josephine Bell

86 books17 followers
Josephine Bell (the pseudonym of Doris Bell Collier Ball) was born into a medical family, the daughter of a surgeon, in Manchester in 1897.

She attended Godolphin School from 1910 to 1916 and then she trained at Newnham College, Cambridge until 1919. On completing her studies she was assigned to University College Hospital in London where she became M.R.C.S. and L.R.C.P. in 1922 and M.B. B.S. in 1924. She married Dr. Norman Dyer Ball in 1923 and the couple had a son and three daughters.

From 1927 until 1935 the couple practised medicine together in Greenwich and London before her husband retired in 1934 and she carried on the practice on her own until her retirement in 1954.
Her husband died in 1936 and she moved to Guildford, Surrey and she became a member of the management committee of St. Luke's Hospital from 1954 to 1962.

She began writing detective fiction in 1936 using the pen name Josephine Bell and her first published novel in the genre was 'Murder in Hospital' (1937).

Perhaps not surprisingly many of her works had a medical background and the first one introduced one of her enduring characters, Dr David Wintringham who worked at Research Hospital in London as a junior assistant physician. He was to feature in 18 of her novels, ending with 'A Well Known Face' (1960).

Overall she wrote more than 60 books, 45 of them in the detective fiction genre where, as well as medical backgrounds, she used such as archaeology in 'Bones in the Barrow' (1953), music in 'The Summer School Mystery' (1950) and even a wildlife sanctuary as background in 'Death on the Reserve' (1966).

She also wrote on drug addicition and criminology and penned a great number of short stories. In addition she was involved in the foundation of the Crime Writers' Association in 1953, an organisation in which she served as chair person in the 1959–60 season.

She died in 1987.

Gerry Wolstenholme
June 2010

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for John Marr.
503 reviews16 followers
January 26, 2021
An interesting enough set-up: a con man is taken to a hospital, seriously injured in an auto accident. An overworked resident, trying to save time, transfuses him with the blood type listed in his diary instead of waiting for a lab test. It is, of course, wrong, altered by parties unknown. But it may not have killed him, as someone also stabbed him before the crash. This sets the cops on the trail of the stabber and a doctor on the trail of whoever tampered with his blood type. Unfortunately, whatever interest is slowly ground down by the plodding pace and suffocating atmosphere of Brit-style snobbery. Yawn.
548 reviews5 followers
April 22, 2021
James Sparks alias Fred Holmes alias Ivan Totteridge rams his car into a lorry and his seriously injured. Rushed to hospital it is also discovered that he is stabbed. Dr Ahmed Patil discovers a notebook with his blood type written it but Sparks dies of blood poisoning. Registrar Colin Frost finds that the blood type has been altered thus clearing his colleague. However somebody in the hospital is a murderer. Colin decides to complete his investigates with the help from local reporter Barry Summers. Josephine Bell provides a clever narrative where our two investigators peel back the life of conman Spark. Ultimately it doesn't matter whodunit the joys is in the writing.
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