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Jack Haldean Murder Mystery #4

A Hundred Thousand Dragons

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The latest ‘Jack Haldean’ mystery, set in the Roaring Twenties - A hundred thousand dragons lie, underneath an Arabian sky . How do a few lines of poetry, a chance encounter in a London hotel, and a death in Sussex lead to a lost city of Arabia, and to the tombs of the Whispering Dead? Jack Haldean has evaded the truth for years, but now, enmeshed in the web of murder, theft and deception, he must find the answer and face up to the truth – a truth as deadly as any dragon . . .

240 pages, Hardcover

First published May 27, 2010

78 people are currently reading
95 people want to read

About the author

Dolores Gordon-Smith

21 books56 followers
Dolores Gordon-Smith is the author of A Fete Worse than Death, the first in the Jack Haldean series. She graduated from the University of Surrey in 1981. She lives in Cheshire, United Kingdom.

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5 stars
132 (34%)
4 stars
148 (39%)
3 stars
79 (20%)
2 stars
13 (3%)
1 star
6 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 35 reviews
Profile Image for Cheryl .
2,460 reviews81 followers
March 1, 2026
This is a 4.5 🌟 read rounded ⬆️ to 5 🌟.

Simply superb!
Profile Image for Tiffany E-P.
1,300 reviews30 followers
December 10, 2024
This series gets better and better! Ended with a cliff hanger!
Profile Image for Jessie.
275 reviews13 followers
August 11, 2015
An enjoyable diversion, if a bit unsatisfactory towards the end. The author built up the backstory of the mystery and the main character in great detail, yet seemed to rush toward a slightly contrived ending.

Notes on second reading: Way too much attention placed on figuring out the timing, then figuring out the code. The ending really is rushed and unsatisfactory. Haldean's interesting war-time backstory emerges but it's almost as if the author is trying to fill in the blanks to make everything fit. And it doesn't quite.

Second reading: August 2015
First read: June 2011
Profile Image for Helen Ahern.
268 reviews24 followers
May 15, 2023
This is another free listen on audible. It’s a bit old fashioned and Sherlock Holmes’s like and the ending is like Raiders of the lost arc. Not bad but not memorable either.
Profile Image for Anne.
1,023 reviews9 followers
December 15, 2023
The Jack Haldean series is simply flights of complicated fancy. But it's quite entertaining and the characters are likeable.
Profile Image for Damaskcat.
1,782 reviews4 followers
April 2, 2014
Jack Haldean must confront something he regards as shameful which happened during World War I when two men from his past converge on his present life. An apparent car crash and a dead body bring both his friends from the police – Superintendent Ashley and Inspector Bill Rackham into the story. Hidden treasure and a trip to the Middle East not to speak of an excursion into the use of various codes including Playfair produce some scenes reminiscent of Dorothy L Sayers’ ‘Have His Carcase.’

I enjoyed this mystery story with its frightening denouement in the desert. I found the background of the early days of flying made interesting reading. It made me realise how relatively safe and easy air travel is today. I like the characters in this series – Jack himself and his cousin Isabelle with her unconventional (unconventional for that era) attitudes to life and adventure.

If you like crime stories without too much violence and with plenty of adventure, where the villains are really villains and the heroes aren’t actually too perfect then this may be the series for you. The books can be read in any order and this is number four in the series.
Profile Image for Chris.
1,203 reviews31 followers
February 23, 2020
I have enjoyed all the other Jack Haldean mysteries, and I was really looking forward to this one, but it just didn't work for me. I'm not quite sure why. I had a hard time keeping track of the players (especially since one character goes by multiple aliases) and found that I just didn't care. This should have been a book that brought us closer to the hero, giving us a sense of what he endured in WWI. Instead it comes off as a bit melodramatic and not particularly believable even with a stretched imagination.
Profile Image for Francine.
326 reviews4 followers
May 16, 2018
It took me a while to get into the story, it was not helping being the fourth volume in the series. It can stand alone but a bit confusing with all the characters. I liked that period in between the two wars.
Profile Image for Lizzytish .
1,877 reviews
January 31, 2023
Not quite as good as the other three. We find out about Jack’s back history during the war. It is not pretty reading. There is a secret code, a murder, and the question of who is who and what side are they on. The ending was highly improbable, but enjoyable.
2,262 reviews9 followers
June 10, 2023
OK, this is the best of the series so far. Get to know more about the main character Jack Haldean and the story goes back to things that happened during the war in the Middle East. Loved the tie-ins to Egyptian archaeology, both King Tut’s tomb and Ramses II and the poem by Shelley.
1,052 reviews6 followers
September 22, 2023
The best one yet

This is the best of the series so far. The characters are likeable and the plots twisty (if that's a word). I still find it hard to credit that Jack is only 23, but I guess war would give a person a more mature outlook. Looking forward to the next one.
41 reviews1 follower
September 23, 2023
New series for me!

I chose the first book because in like reading about the era. Wasn't quite sure at first, but then got hooked on the characters and the mystery. Binge read the rest .... Great read!
245 reviews
November 14, 2023
Stick with it, the end is great

Parts of this book are straightforward, parts are grim, but the end really zings. Better than H. Rider Haggard, almost Amelia Peabody. Also,not helps if you read at least one of the earlier books first. Recommended.
Profile Image for Michael Dunn.
547 reviews
April 24, 2019
A very interesting murder with a clever twist. I realize this is fiction, but the ending was a bit presposterous,
Profile Image for Ruth.
4,762 reviews
April 20, 2023
20 Very Boys Own derring do. The plot is, IMO, a tad overdone and unnecessarily convoluted. But it has a satisfactory start and ending. I will read more of Mr Haldean.
67 reviews
April 12, 2024
Warning: torture of a minor.
Profile Image for Susan.
7,378 reviews70 followers
November 13, 2023
1920s. Jack Haldean has to return to 1915 when he was a 17 year old pilot who was sent on a secret mission, to solve his current mystery.
An entertaining historical mystery.
Profile Image for JJ.
416 reviews7 followers
August 1, 2024
I love these Jack Haldane books and am working my way through them.
This one recounts some of Jack’s war exploits when he was a very young pilot.
There was a very traumatic time when he was captured and he has carried a guilt complex about it through his life. Now it all comes back to haunt him and the older Jack must try to understand what the younger Jack had to do to survive.
Profile Image for Val Sanford.
476 reviews11 followers
January 18, 2015
Echos of WW1 again plague Jack. This time he must confront the fear and self-hatred stemming from his actions in the Arabian sands as a 17-year old RAF pilot sent behind enemy lines. I loved reading about Egypt when Egypt was a newly discovered wondrous land of Pharaohs, Sphinx and Bedouin. The heat, the dust, the wonder all came back and my desire to see Petra rekindled. The story is clever but unoriginal in its cast of villains and deluded enthusiasts, but the insight into Jack's past, the torment and his drive to free himself is grand reading. As always, Jack and his friends get a little too lucky at escaping from the jaws of death, but that's part of the fun, too. Indian Jones meets the British lords and ladies. Terrifically fun.
Profile Image for Jessi.
5,660 reviews20 followers
January 7, 2021
Jack Haldean has met Durant Craig before. That's why he's not surprised when the man confronts him in Claridge's Hotel. Also present are Jack's friend and a lawyer named Vaughn. They are all also present at a costume party when a car accident ends the life of... someone. It all harkens back to the war and when Craig and Haldean had crossed paths before. And the poem that leads them on the hunt for a hundred thousand dragons.
This book just didn't keep my attention like some of the others have. It was a nice enough book in the series but nothing spectacular. When I reread it as an audiobook, it definitely improved.
Profile Image for Karen Hsu.
550 reviews6 followers
January 9, 2011
This book is an ode to Agatha Christie. It's written in much of the same style (male protagonist/ordinary person detective) and feel (England in the 1920s). For a book my husband picked up randomly at the library, I really enjoyed it, though there were a few minor parts where I thought the author over-described the scenes/dialogue.

Overall, well written and well paced. A good, solid mystery.

(spoiler)

...
I was, however, confused at the very end, where I assumed the main character died...but I checked and she is still writing Jack Haldean mysteries, so I was wrong.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
5,986 reviews67 followers
September 3, 2010
Jack Haldean had left the deserts of Trans Jordan disgraced and broken. But now, years after the end of the Great War, he meets one of the few people who knows what happened. If the story ever gets out--Jack doesn't want to think about that. A sudden death, a mysterious American who can't be found, a beautiful woman, and a few lines of verse bring Jack and his friends into danger. Another addition to an enjoyable series.
Profile Image for Anna.
1,049 reviews41 followers
August 9, 2017
I love this series! It not only evokes the spirit of Agatha Christie and classic murder mysteries but Golden Age movies.
In this one, we get a glimpse of some of Jack's war-time action. It is more of an adventure story rather than a straight mystery with the past reaching into the present, codes to decipher, former adversaries with unfinished business. The ending seemed to be a bit hurried, but a good adventure along the way -- and Isabelle's wedding .
Profile Image for Debbie.
1,428 reviews
September 13, 2010
I really like Jack, the protagonist of this series, so I will try another--even though the woman I was seeing as his romantic interest just married someone else--but this volume had too much time with Jack and other sitting around discussing timing and unraveling hidden codes. Although it ends with a show down in the deserts of North Africa.
Profile Image for Diane.
78 reviews2 followers
January 8, 2014
This one emphasized Jack as action hero, so not quite as believable. However, I think it has one of the best endings to any of the mysteries in the series or mysteries in general. The statement about the planes catching the sun, resonates like the green light at the end of the pier. Also an interesting background on England in Arabia during and after World War I.
607 reviews15 followers
July 10, 2012
What a page turner! It's the best yet in a fine series -- may it continue for years to come! In addition to a gripping storyline, the author provides fascinating information about Jack Haldean's past, further deepening his character.
Profile Image for Jane.
758 reviews15 followers
September 6, 2010
A little disappointed in this her 4th Jack Haldean mystery. Not as interesting and there were some omissions that were established in the first 3 that bothered me
Displaying 1 - 30 of 35 reviews

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