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CONTENTS
I. The Solitary Passenger
II. The Procurator Fiscal
III. The Heir
IV. The Man from the West
V. The Third Visitor
VI. At Night
VII. The Drive Home
VIII. Sir Reginald
IX. A Philosopher
X. The Letter
XI. News
XII. Cicely
XIII. The Deductive Process
XIV. The Question of Motive
XV. Two Women
XVI. Rumour
XVII. A Suggestion
XVIII. £1200
XIX. The Empty Compartment
XX. The Sporting Visitor
XXI. Mr. Carrington's Walk
XXII. Mr. Carrington and the Fiscal
XXIII. Simon's Views
XXIV. Mr. Bisset's Assistant
XXV. A Telegram
XXVI. At Stanesland
XXVII. Flight
XXVIII. The Return
XXIX. Brother and Sister
XXX. A Marked Man
XXXI. The Letter Again
XXXII. The Sympathetic Stranger
XXXIII. The House of Mysteries
XXXIV. A Confidential Conversation
XXXV. In the Garden
XXXVI. The Walking Stick
XXXVII. Bisset's Advice
XXXVIII. Trapped
XXXIX. The Yarn
XL. The Last Chapter

252 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1919

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About the author

J. Storer Clouston

86 books7 followers
Joseph Storer Clouston, although born in Cumberland, was classed as an Orcadian author and historian as he originally came from an old Orkney family.

He was the son of psychiatrist Sir Thomas Smith Clouston and his wife Harriet (nee Storer). He was educated at Merchiston Castle School, Edinburgh and Magdalen College, Oxford. Although he was called to the bar at the Inner Temple in London in 1895, he never practised as a lawyer.

His first published book was Vandred the Viking; or The Feud and the Spell (1898) and the following year he published what was to be his most celebrated work, The Lunatic at Large, to which there were a number of sequels.

He married his wife Winifred at St Andrews and St Leonards, Fife on 11 March 1903 and at one time they lived in St John's Wood, London. They had two sons and one daughter.

His novel The Spy in Black (1917) was made into a successful film in 1939 and starred Conrad Veidt. It was released in the USA as 'U-Boat 29'.

He was also a historian and as such was the author of a couple of histories of Orkney, Records of the Earldom of Orkney 1299 - 1614 (1914) and A History of Orkney (1932). He was a founder member and the second president of the Orkney Antiquarian Society, and a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland.

He died at his home Smoogro House, Orphir, Orkney on 23 June 1944.

Gerry Wolstenholme
October 2012

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Profile Image for Eric.
1,497 reviews49 followers
March 24, 2023
I came across this author thanks to the BLCC anthology "The Edinburgh Crime", edited by Martin Edwards.

First published in 1919, this is a tale of murder in a rather generic Scottish country setting, which has some interesting features.

It offers an object lesson in how best to represent the speech pattern of native Scots without condescension, or reducing the reader to exasperation or a state of incomprehension.The butler is satirised for other reasons, but is not guyed for his way of speaking. He is also the antithesis of butlers found in other contemporary crime fiction.

Additionally, the novel is lightly humorous without being facetious or "jokey-blokey" in any way, and contains quite believable but understated romantic elements.

For seasoned GAD fiction readers, the plot hinges on a device which is fairly obvious, but well-handled. The involvement of the police is negligible, but Carrington, the private detective, does his stuff, piecing together physical clues and information garnered from interviews.

The Simon of the title is lawyer to the local gentry, and also Procurator Fiscal, which puts him in a unique position here.

Most enjoyable and very readable.

3.5 stars.
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