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Jerusalem The Emanation of the Giant Albion
Blake, William
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Folio Society Published Works Number 3042

Tey, Josephine - The Singing Sands

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Tey, Josephine - The Singing Sands (Published in by The Folio Society in 2014. Introduced by Val McDermid. Illustrated by Mark Smith. One of Tey's finest novels, this suspenseful story centres on the mysterious death of a young man on a train, and the cryptic poem that gradually reveals the greed and envy behind his demise. Award-winning artist Mark Smith illustrates. He stumbled up the steps and across the bridge . Great bursts of steam billowed up round him from below, noises clanged and echoed from the dark vault about him. They were all wrong about hell, he thought. Hell wasn't a nice cosy place where you fried . Hell was concentrated essence of a winter morning after a sleepless night of self-distaste. Diagnosed with 'overwork' and in the grip of debilitating claustrophobia, Inspector Alan Grant takes leave from Scotland Yard and heads for the peaceful home of his cousin Laura, who lives with her family in the Scottish Highlands. As the London mail draws into Inverness, he sees the surly sleeping-car attendant trying to rouse an unresponsive young man. He is compelled, firstly, to point out that the passenger is dead, and secondly to pick up the newspaper that has slipped onto the compartment floor. On it the deceased, who appears to have drunk himself into oblivion, has scrawled an elusive poem about a paradise guarded by 'singing sand'. Grant is soon fascinated by the hopes and dreams of the dead man with 'tumbled black hair and … reckless eyebrows'. And though he has planned to do nothing in Scotland but fish, he cannot help but act on the growing suspicion that a far more sinister story is waiting to be uncovered …. Winner of Silver medal (book category) in the Illustrators 57 competition,. At the Society of Illustrators in New York. The Singing Sands book. Bound in buckram, blocked with a design by Mark Smith. Set in Dante with No. 5 display. 256 pages; frontispiece and 6 colour illustrations. 9" x 5.75". Paving a way for contemporary crime fiction. Introducing this edition, the acclaimed crime writer Val McDermid explores Tey's enduring popularity among readers and novelists alike. She also comments on her unconventional characterisation, including Grant's ambiguous character and his susceptibility to the forces of 'unreason' – both uncommon traits in a golden-age detective. For McDermid, Tey was the bridge between that era and contemporary crime fiction, opening up the genre for writers such as Patricia Highsmith and Ruth Rendell. Like the earlier Brat Farrar and The Franchise Affair, Tey's 1952 novel is a classic mystery, but one that is unusually sensitive to the frailties and oddities of human psychology. Mark Smith's enigmatic illustrations capture its atmosphere of quiet suspense. The crime-writers' favourite. From time to time, audiences ask crime writers who we would choose if we could have a single new novel from a dead crime writer. The name that comes up most frequently is not Agatha Christie or Arthur Conan Doyle or Raymond Chandler. It's not even one of the more recently deceased such as Reginald Hill or Elmore Leonard. No, the writer's choice of fantasy reprise is a reclusive Scottish spinster who wrote only a handful of crime novels. The writer we pick above all others is Josephine Tey. . Partly that's because of the range and quality of the work itself. Reading Tey for the first time is a surprise and a delight; rereading her provokes the same response. But to my mind, of equal importance is Tey's role as a bridge between the classic detective stories of the Golden Age and contemporary crime fiction. She left the genre in a different place from where she found it and she cracked open a series of doors for others to walk through. An extract from Val McDermid's introduction. From the Folio Society description. )

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