Stories by the author best known for the "Fu Manchu" stories. Includes: The Secret of Holm Peel (1912); The Owl Hoots Twice (1948); A House Possessed (1912); The Eyes of Fu Manchu (1957); The Mystery of the Marsh Hole (1905); Bazarada; For Love of Mistress Mary (1914); Brother Wing Commanders (1942).
Lost Classic! Rohmer's Haunting of Low Fennel, last printed in 1926, didn't even make the legendary Bookfinger re-issues. Here in their entirety, seven stories to chill you as only the author of Fu Manchu could!
Mystery and mayhem! Sax Rohmer at his unparalleled best. The leopard couch of eternal memories . . . The severed hand of a desert sheikh—and its frightful vengeance . . . An old hag damned to misery, until she can acquire a thousand kisses . . . The mysterious black cat that knew too much . . . The vampiric young nobleman who terrorized London . . . A Christmas house party—with Satan himself as a guest? These and more thrilling adventures by the incomparable Sax Rohmer await the reader in The Leopard Couch and Other Stories of the Fantastic and Supernatural — including four stories never previously published in the United States! With an introduction by F. Paul Wilson. Selected and with editorial notes by Gene Christie.
A collection of nine mysteries featuring the eccentric psychic detective Moris Klaw. Created by Sax Rohmer (creator of Fu Manchu) Klaw uses images of people’s thoughts as a crime solving technique and is often assisted by his beautiful daughter Isis.
Sax Rohmer was an English writer best known for his most famous character, Dr. Fu-Manchu, who solved mysteries in a vein similar to Conan Doyle's iconic Sherlock Holmes.
*From Limehouse to Cairo, by Sax Rohmer* A CANNON BOOKS Mystery & Detective Collection. Sax Rohmer is a pseudonym for the British writer Arthur Sarsfield Ward (1883 – 1959). Success and popularity came to Rohmer in 1913 with the publishing of Mystery of Dr. Fu-Manchu, serialized from October 1912 to June 1913.Rohmer’s childhood fascination with Asia and Egypt and the occult combined with the public’s interest in reading detective and supernatural stories resulted in two well-received short story collections: Tales of Chinatown (10 stories, 1922) and Tales of Secret Egypt (12 stories, 1918)This book, From Limehouse to Cairo, gathers these twenty-two stories of murder, mystery and greed into a single collection.Part One is dominated by tales of Chief Inspector Kerry of the Criminal Investigation Department in New Scotland Yard, along with detective Paul Harley and his buddy Mr. Knox, as they immerses themselves in mysterious cases centered in Limehouse (East London’s Chinese district and underworld). This section also includes stories with elements of the supernatural: “Tcheriapin.” and “The Hand of the Mandarin Quong.”Part Two introduces us to Englishman Neville Kernaby, employee of Moses, Murphy &Co. (purveyors of fake antiquities), and to Abû Tabâh (clergyman, magician and government agent). Both men repeatedly find themselves crossing paths as they become wrapped up in the mysteries, perils and intrigue of British occupied Cairo.Part Three of this collection differs from the previous two sections in that Rohmer introduces adventures framed with mystical and supernatural themes.Rohmer’s writing is straight forward, fast paced and framed with a delightfully exotic atmosphere. Most of all, these stories are just downright entertaining.*From Limehouse to Cairo* (388 pages) TALES of CHINATOWN: The Daughter of Huang Chow, Kerry’s Kid, The Pigtail of Hi Wing Ho, The House of Golden Joss, Man with the Shaven Skull, The White Hat, Tcheriapin, The Dance of the Veils, The Hand of the Mandarin Quong, The Key of the Temple of Heaven.TALES of SECRET EGYPT: The Yashmak of Pearls, The Death-Ring of Sneferu, The Lady of the LatticeOmar of Ispahân, Breath of Allah, The Whispering Mummy, Lord of the Jackals, Lure of Souls, The Secret of Ismail, Harûn Pasha, In the Valley of the Sorceress, Pomegranate Flower.