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The Sussex Cuckoo: An Anthony Bathurst Mystery
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The Sussex Cuckoo: An Anthony Bathurst Mystery
Current price: $16.99

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The Sussex Cuckoo: An Anthony Bathurst Mystery
Current price: $16.99
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Size: Paperback
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The wedges are fixed for the Sussex Cuckoo. Hurry if you would be in time. Even then I fear that you may be too late. Terms as arranged. NEHEMIAH.
Thus reads an announcement in the
Times
Agony Column, catching the eye of Anthony Lotherington Bathurst on the morning he visits botanist James Frith. Frith is the owner of valuable Jacobite antiquities and has been receiving threatening letters. The next day his corpse is found. How did Frith end up without a mark on his body, yet dead from tetanus poisoning? Things look even more serious for Bathurst when a second death occurs . . .
The Sussex Cuckoo
was first published in 1935. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Steve Barge.
Thus reads an announcement in the
Times
Agony Column, catching the eye of Anthony Lotherington Bathurst on the morning he visits botanist James Frith. Frith is the owner of valuable Jacobite antiquities and has been receiving threatening letters. The next day his corpse is found. How did Frith end up without a mark on his body, yet dead from tetanus poisoning? Things look even more serious for Bathurst when a second death occurs . . .
The Sussex Cuckoo
was first published in 1935. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Steve Barge.
The wedges are fixed for the Sussex Cuckoo. Hurry if you would be in time. Even then I fear that you may be too late. Terms as arranged. NEHEMIAH.
Thus reads an announcement in the
Times
Agony Column, catching the eye of Anthony Lotherington Bathurst on the morning he visits botanist James Frith. Frith is the owner of valuable Jacobite antiquities and has been receiving threatening letters. The next day his corpse is found. How did Frith end up without a mark on his body, yet dead from tetanus poisoning? Things look even more serious for Bathurst when a second death occurs . . .
The Sussex Cuckoo
was first published in 1935. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Steve Barge.
Thus reads an announcement in the
Times
Agony Column, catching the eye of Anthony Lotherington Bathurst on the morning he visits botanist James Frith. Frith is the owner of valuable Jacobite antiquities and has been receiving threatening letters. The next day his corpse is found. How did Frith end up without a mark on his body, yet dead from tetanus poisoning? Things look even more serious for Bathurst when a second death occurs . . .
The Sussex Cuckoo
was first published in 1935. This new edition features an introduction by crime fiction historian Steve Barge.