The Three Old Ladies' Tea by Friedrich Glauser (Translated) Audiolibro Por Friedrich Glauser arte de portada

The Three Old Ladies' Tea by Friedrich Glauser (Translated)

Muestra de Voz Virtual

$0.00 por los primeros 30 días

Prueba por $0.00
Escucha audiolibros, podcasts y Audible Originals con Audible Plus por un precio mensual bajo.
Escucha en cualquier momento y en cualquier lugar en tus dispositivos con la aplicación gratuita Audible.
Los suscriptores por primera vez de Audible Plus obtienen su primer mes gratis. Cancela la suscripción en cualquier momento.

The Three Old Ladies' Tea by Friedrich Glauser (Translated)

De: Friedrich Glauser
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
Prueba por $0.00

Escucha con la prueba gratis de Plus

Compra ahora por $4.99

Compra ahora por $4.99

Obtén 3 meses por US$0.99 al mes

Background images

Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual

Voz Virtual es una narración generada por computadora para audiolibros..
At two a.m. a young man appears in the Geneva city center with symptoms of poisoning. Soon afterward he dies in the hospital, and days later a pharmacist is fatally poisoned as well. Suspicion falls on a prominent professor who enjoys great local esteem, but is addicted to morphine and was in close contact with the victims. Simpson O'Key, a British secret agent posing as a journalist, involves himself in the city's police investigation. He soon learns that a maharaja from an Indian border province is in Geneva, the League of Nations' headquarters, to sell his country's oil resources-- a matter of great interest to the British and the Soviets. And then he hears rumors of three old ladies who like to drink tea... The Swiss writer Friedrich Glauser, founder of serious German-language crime fiction, first tried his hand at the genre in 1931 with this sprawling work set in Geneva, filled with local color and international intrigue. This is the first English-language translation. Although "Der Tee" is not considered to be as well-crafted a detective novel as Glauser's five famous "Studer" mysteries, the very features that led to its rejection in the 1930's make it an entertaining read today: a kaleidoscopic mix of characters, psychiatric medicine, secret agents, mysticism, narcotics, poisons, and social commentary, presented with a self-aware wink of the eye at the genre's conventions.
Todavía no hay opiniones