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Anthony Berkeley CoxThis page lists all novels, story collections and non-fiction by Anthony Berkeley Cox or with a contribution by Anthony Berkeley Cox. A section of books about, or partly about, Anthony Berkeley Cox is also included. Anthony Berkeley Cox published books using the names Anthony Berkeley, A.B. Cox, Francis Iles and A. Monmouth Platts. All books published using these names are listed on this page. For lists of books credited to specific pen names, see:
- Anthony Berkeley
- A.B. Cox
- Francis Iles
Cover images are, where possible, of the first UK edition and a recent edition.
This page is divided into three sections.
By Anthony Berkeley Cox:
- novels / short story collections
- crime related non-fiction
About Anthony Berkeley Cox:
- biographical / critical
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Anthony Berkeley Cox (all pen names): Novels, short story collection, and collaborative novels |
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Brenda EntertainsA.B. Cox
Jenkins1925
A comic novel.
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The Family Witch: An Essay in AbsurdityA.B. Cox
Jenkins1925
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The Layton Court Mystery"?"
Jenkins1925 Later editions credited to Anthony Berkeley. A Roger Sheringham novel.
"Mr Victor Stanworth, a genial old man of sixty, apparently without a care in the world, is entertaining a party of friends at his summer residence, Layton Court. One morning he is found shot in the library. Was it suicide or murder? Roger Sheringham, one of the guests, determines to solve the mystery. He sets about it as he might do in real life. He is not one of those hawk-eyed, tight-lipped detectives who pursue their inexorable and silent way to the very heart of things. He makes a mistake or two occasionally, but he does not conceal any of the evidence and the reader has the same data to go upon as the detective, and is carried breathlessly through to the end."
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The Wychford Poisoning Case: An Essay in CriminologyBy the author of 'The Layton Court Mystery'
Collins1926 Later editions credited to Anthony Berkeley. A Roger Sheringham novel.
"In this exciting book the author breaks away from the usual artificial atmosphere of the conventional detective story and substitutes that of a typical cause celebre in real life, sensationalised by the newspapers and with the guilt or innocence of the suspected person on every one's lips. Mrs Bentley has been arrested for the murder of her husband by poisoning him with arsenic, and the evidence against her id overwhelming. Roger Sheringham, to whom psychological values are as important as police clues, is convinced of her innocence, and sets out to prove it. After an exciting series of developments the denoument is as unexpected as it is logical."
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The Professor on PawsA.B. Cox
Collins1926
A humorous fantasy novel in which a professor's brain is transplanted into a cat.
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Mr. Priestley’s ProblemA.B. Cox
Collins1927 Published in the US as The Amateur Crime.
"What would you do if you found you had committed a murder? What would the ordinary, decent man do if he killed a fellow-creature inadvertently, and there was no evidence against him? These are the problems which agitate two amateur criminologists, and their argument becomes so heated that they agree to stage a mock murder in order to watch the reaction of the supposed murderer. The issues become more and more involved as the book proceeds, and the situations in which the now highly perturbed conspirators find themselves more and more ludicrous."
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Roger Sheringham and the Vane MysteryAnthony Berkeley
Collins1927 Subsequently published by Collins as The Vane Mystery. Published in the US as The Mystery at Lovers’ Cave. A Roger Sheringham novel.
"When the Daily Courier sends Roger Sheringham to Hampshire, it's a job after his own heart. The body of a woman has been found at the bottom of the cliffs at Ludmouth Bay, and despite a verdict of accidental death, the local sighting of Inspector Moresby from Scotland Yard suggests otherwise. Unable to resist a little amateur sleuth work, Sheringham starts digging around. Events lead him down one blind alley after another as he attempts to rival Inspector Moresby and devise the correct theory about the tragic death of Mrs Vane."
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Cicely DisappearsA. Monmouth Platts
John Long1927
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The Silk Stocking MurdersAnthony Berkeley
Collins1928 A Roger Sheringham novel.
"This is a study of a type of murder (fortunately rare in this country) in which the criminal, though sane in every other aspect, suffers from an homicidal mania, the murders he commits thus affording no motive for then police to investigate. Roger Sheringham, who finds himself drawn into the case as a consequence of his connection with the Daily Courier, realises this, and though officially attached to Scotland Yard for the time being, follows an unorthodox line of his own, while Chief Inspector Moresby, his old rival, who is in charge of the investigation, relies on Scotland Yard's conventional methods. Two entirely different lines of detection, both attempting to bring to justice an unusually dangerous criminal, are thus shown in contrasting operation, and around this main theme is woven a story of suspicion, pursuit and cunning."
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The Poisoned Chocolates CaseAnthony Berkeley
Collins1929 A Roger Sheringham novel.
"Graham and Joan Bendix have apparently succeeded in making that eighth wonder of the modern world, a happy marriage. And into the middle of it there drops, like a clap of thunder, a box of chocolates. Joan Bendix is killed by a poisoned box of liqueur chocolates that cannot have been intended for her to eat. The police investigation rapidly reaches a dead end. Chief Inspector Moresby calls on Roger Sheringham and his Crimes Circle - six amateur but intrepid detectives - to consider the case. The evidence is laid before the Circle and the members take it in turn to offer a solution. Each is more convincing than the last, slowly filling in the pieces of the puzzle, until the dazzling conclusion."
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The Piccadilly MurderAnthony Berkeley
Collins1929
"This story opens with the unusual situation of a witness actually seeing a murder being committed. An elderly lady and a red-haired man are having coffee in the lounge of The Piccadilly Palace Hotel, and Mr Ambrose Chisserwick notices the latter drop something into her cup. Within a quarter of an hour she dies of prussic acid poisoning. It is established that nobody else has been near her; the evidence that death could not have been due to suicide. She is identified as a Miss Sinclair, a wealthy woman, and the red-haired man as her nephew and sole heir. A clearer case never existed. Mr Chisserwick becomes the star witness for the police and the red-haired man is committed for trial. But was he the poisoner?"
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The Second ShotAnthony Berkeley
Hodder & Stoughton1930 A Roger Sheringham novel.
"John Hillyard, the owner of Milton Deeps Farm, is a writer of detective stories. Some of his friends, who are staying at the farm, decide to amuse themselves by testingbhis capabilities as a detective in practice instead of only on paper, and they therefore arrange a mock murder; one of the party is to pretend to be murdered, and one to be the murderer, and John Hillyard is to find out who is the pseudo-criminal; proper clues are to be laid and the whole thing made to resemble a real murder as closely as possible. In addition to John Hillyard, other detective story writers who live in the district are invited to try their hands. The game is played, apparently, as arranged, but the detective story writers prove dismal failures at their own game; not one of them is able to detect anything. But after the game is over two mysterious shots are heard which have no part in it. Somebody has taken advantage of the farce to shoot Eric Scott-Davies in sober earnest. Enter the police - and Roger Sheringham."
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Malice AforethoughtFrancis Iles
Mundanus / Victor Gollancz1931
"Dr. Edmund Bickleigh married above his station. Although popular and well respected in his little Devonshire community, he seethes with resentment at the superior social status of his domineering wife, Julia. Bickleigh soothes his inferiority complex by seducing as many of the local women as he possibly can but with the collapse of his latest fling and a fresh dose of sneering contempt from Julia, the doctor resolves to silence his wife forever and begins plotting the perfect murder."
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Top Storey MurderAnthony Berkeley
Hodder & Stoughton1931 Published in the US as Top Story Murder.
"On the night of the murder the occupants of Monmouth Mansions were as follows -
- Mrs Boyd (caretaker)
- Mr Augustus Weller
- Mr and Mrs Kingcross
- Mr and Mrs Barrington Braybrook
- Miss Evadne Delamere
- The Ennismore Smiths
- Mrs Pilchard
- Miss Barnett
…. And all are under suspicion!"
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The Floating AdmiralMembers Of The Detection Club
Hodder and Stoughton1931
A collaborative novel with contributions by Agatha Christie, , Dorothy L. Sayers, Clemence Dane, Anthony Berkeley. G. K. Chesterton, Freeman Wills Crofts, G. D. H. Cole, Margaret Cole, Henry Wade, Ronald Knox, Canon Victor Whitechurch, John Rhode, Milward Kennedy, and Edgar Jepson.
"Inspector Rudge does not encounter many cases of murder in the sleepy seaside town of Whynmouth. But when an old sailor lands a rowing boat containing a fresh corpse with a stab wound to the chest, the Inspector's investigation immediately comes up against several obstacles. The vicar, whose boat the body was found in, is clearly withholding information, and the victim's niece has disappeared. There is clearly more to this case than meets the eye – even the identity of the victim is called into doubt. Inspector Rudge begins to wonder just how many people have contributed to this extraordinary crime and whether he will ever unravel it."
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Before the FactFrancis Iles
Victor Gollancz1932
"Described on its first publication in 1932 as 'one of the finest studies of murder ever written', Before the Fact tells the tale of wealthy but plain Lina Mclaidlaw, who marries the charming and feckless Johnny Aysgarth against the advice of her father. Lina is certain she can change him for the better, until she is forced to acknowledge that he is a compulsive liar, a crook and a murderer. But still she loves him, while fearing she will inevitably become one of his victims."
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Murder in the BasementAnthony Berkeley
Hodder & Stoughton1932 A Roger Sheringham novel.
"Roger and Molly Dane have something of a surprise in their new house. When Roger explores the basement on return from their honeymoon, he discovers something odd with the flooring. Hoping to find buried treasure, he digs up the body of a woman instead. Chief Inspector Moresby and Roger Sheringham are then left with the task of discovering who the lady was, how she came to be there, and who shot her in the back of the head."
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Jumping JennyAnthony Berkeley
Hodder & Stoughton1933 Published in the US as Dead Mrs. Stratton. A Roger Sheringham novel.
"Gentleman sleuth Roger Sheringham is at a weekend house party when one of the guests is found hanged. The victim has spent most of the evening talking about suicide and had, apparently, left the party after a row with her husband. Life would be best for everyone if the death was suicide, but is that verdict too much to hope for? The victim was extremely unpopular, and many people's lives would be better off without her. Some might even say that she deserved to die. What conclusion will the Coroner come to?"
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Ask a PolicemanMember of the Detection Club
Arthur Barker1933
A collaborative novel with contributions by Dorothy L. Sayers, Gladys Mitchell, Anthony Berkeley, John Rhode, Helen Simpson, and Milward Kennedy. Lord Peter Wimsey contributes to the investigation.
"Lord Comstock is a barbarous newspaper tycoon with enemies in high places. His murder in the study of his country house poses a dilemma for the Home Secretary. In the hours before his death, Lord Comstock’s visitors included the government Chief Whip, an Archbishop, and the Assistant Commissioner for Scotland Yard. Suspicion falls upon them all and threatens the impartiality of any police investigation. Abandoning protocol, the Home Secretary invites four famous detectives to solve the case: Mrs Adela Bradley, Sir John Saumarez, Lord Peter Wimsey, and Mr Roger Sheringham. All are different, all are plausible, all are on their own – and none of them can ask a policeman."
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Panic PartyAnthony Berkeley
Hodder & Stoughton1934 Published in the US as Mr. Pidgeon’s Island.
"Mr Pidgeon is the unlikely and lucky owner of a large yacht and a desert island. Gentleman sleuth Roger Sheringham is one of the members of the party Pidgeon invites for a cruise. When the ship and its crew return to port without them, the party are marooned for a fortnight on the private island. Sheringham is shocked to discover Pidgeon has organised the whole thing as an experiment. He has brought them together to enact a bizarre murder and detection game. But then the madness starts and tragedy strikes."
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Six Against The YardMembers Of The Detection Club
Selwyn and Blount1936
A collection of six stories - one each by Margery Allingham, Anthony Berkeley, Freeman Wills Crofts, Ronald Knox, Dorothy L. Sayers and Russell Thorndike.
"Is the ‘perfect murder’ possible? Can that crime be committed with such consummate care, with such exacting skill, that it is unsolvable – even to the most astute investigator? In this unique collection, legendary crime writers Margery Allingham, Anthony Berkeley, Freeman Wills Crofts, Ronald Knox, Dorothy L. Sayers and Russell Thorndike each attempt to create the unsolvable murder, which Superintendent Cornish of the CID then attempts to unravel."
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Trial and ErrorAnthony Berkeley
Hodder & Stoughton1937
"Non-descript, upstanding Mr Todhunter is told that he has only months to live. He decides to commit a murder for the good of mankind. Finding a worthy victim proves far from easy, and there is a false start before he settles on and dispatches his target. But then the police arrest an innocent man, and the honourable Todhunter has to set about proving himself guilty of the murder."
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Not To Be TakenAnthony Berkeley
Hodder & Stoughton1938 Published in the US as A Puzzle in Poison.
"Mr John Waterhouse died of arsenical poisoning. There was no one in the village of Anneypenney who bore him ill-will, yet he had undoubtedly been murdered. The story is told through the mouth of a close friend of the dead man who knew all the facts and who, though no detective, finally solved the riddle. There are glimpses of English village life, and of two unusual women; and it may perhaps be hinted that even the Nazis were not uninterested in the death of this English squire."
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Death in the HouseAnthony Berkeley
Hodder & Stoughton1939
"You may think it difficult to commit murder on the floor of the House of Commons twice in one week, when crowded debates are in progress. You may think it still more difficult to stage that sort of crime - and get away with it. It all depends on your familiarity with the work of Anthony Berkeley, who has given a House of Commons setting to his new detective novel ….. it will be an ingenious reader who can answer correctly the three questions on page 241 of Mr Berkeley's new detective novel without reading his final chapter."
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As For The WomanFrancis Iles
Jarrolds1939
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The Scoop and Behind the ScreenMembers Of The Detection Club
Gollancz1983
Two detective serials that were written by various members of the Detection Club for weekly radio broadcasts on the BBC in 1930 and 1931. The scripts were originally published in instalments in the Listener magazine shortly after the broadcasts. The book brings together the two complete scripts.
The contributing authors were Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, Anthony Berkeley, E.C. Bentley, Freeman Wills Crofts, Clemence Dane, Ronald Knox, and Hugh Walpole.
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The Avenging Chance and Other Mysteries from Roger Sheringham’s CasebookAnthony BerkeleyEditor: Tony Medwar and Arthur Robinson
Crippen & Landru 2004 Roger Sheringham short stories. An enlarged paperback edition was published in 2015.
"The title story in The Avenging Chance has long been considered one of the greatest formal detective stories. This book also collects all the additional cases of Sheringham and Moresby. "
The contents are:
- Concerning Roger Sheringham
- The Avenging Chance
- Perfect Alibi
- The Mystery Of Horne's Copse
- Unsound Mind
- White Butterfly
- The Wrong Jar
- Double Bluff
- "Mr. Bearstowe Says"
- The Bargee's Holiday (only in 2015 edition)
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Anthony Berkeley Cox (all pen names): Non-fiction |
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Jugged JournalismA.B. Cox
Jenkins1925
A collection of essays and humorous articles primarily about writing. Includes two short stories: The Frozen Fang and the Sherlock Holmes parody Holmes And The Dasher.
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O England! A Political StudyA.B. Cox
Hamish Hamilton1934
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The Anatomy Of Murder: Famous Crimes Critically Considered by Members of the Detection ClubHelen Simpson / John Rhode / Margaret Cole / E.R. Punshon / Dorothy L. Sayers / Francis Iles / Freeman Wills Crofts
John Lane The Bodley Head1936
"A unique anthology for crime aficionados – seven of the world’s most notorious genuine murder mysteries retold by the most accomplished classic crime writers of their generation."
The contents are:
- Death of Henry Kinder (Helen Simpson)
- Constance Kent (John Rhode)
- The Case of Adelaide Bartlett (Margaret Cole)
- An Impression of the Landru Case (E.R.Punshon)
- The Murder of Julia Wallace (Dorothy L.Sayers)
- The Rattenbury Case (Francis Iles)
- New Zealand Tragedy (The Lakey Murder Case) (Freeman Wills Crofts)
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More Anatomy Of MurderDorothy L. Sayers And Certain Other Members Of The Detection Club
Berkley1990
Three of the essays that were originally published in The Anatomy Of Murder in 1936. The contents are:
- The Murder of Julia Wallace (Dorothy L.Sayers)
- The Rattenbury Case (Francis Iles)
- New Zealand Tragedy (The Lakey Murder Case) (Freeman Wills Crofts)
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Books about or partly about Anthony Berkeley Cox |
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Elusion Aforethought: The Life and Writing of Anthony Berkeley CoxMalcolm J. Turnbull
Bowing Green State University Popular Press1996
"Elusion Aforethought provides significant new material on the work of crime and detection fiction writer Anthony Berkeley Cox, a popular and prolific English journalist, satirist, and novelist in the period between World Wars I and II. Cox has been called one of the most important and influential of Golden Age detective fiction writers by such authorities as Haycraft, Symons, and Keating, yet he occupies a surprisingly ambivalent position in the history of the crime genre."
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The Golden Age of MurderMartin Edwards
HarperCollins2015
"The Golden Age of Murder tells for the first time the extraordinary story of British detective fiction between the two World Wars. A gripping real-life detective story, it investigates how Dorothy L. Sayers, Anthony Berkeley, Agatha Christie and their colleagues in the mysterious Detection Club transformed crime fiction. Their work cast new light on unsolved murders whilst hiding clues to their authors’ darkest secrets, and their complex and sometimes bizarre private lives. Crime novelist and current Detection Club President Martin Edwards rewrites the history of crime fiction with unique authority, transforming our understanding of detective stories, and the brilliant but tormented men and women who wrote them."
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