Marie Adelaide Belloc Lowndes Bücher
Diese produktive englische Autorin erlangte einen Ruf für ihre Romane, die auf gekonnte Weise aufregende Ereignisse mit psychologischem Interesse verbanden. Ihr Werk, das jahrzehntelang aktiv war, zeichnete sich durch die Fähigkeit aus, Leser in komplexe menschliche Beziehungen und moralische Dilemmata zu ziehen. Mit ihrem einzigartigen Stil erforschte sie die dunkleren Aspekte der menschlichen Natur und tauchte oft in Mysterien und Intrigen ein. Ihre Werke, die häufig von Spannung durchzogen waren, fesseln die Leser bis heute mit ihrer psychologischen Tiefe und fesselnden Erzählungen.






Die Geschichte verbindet das Paranormale mit romantischen Elementen und spannenden Mysterien. Eine Protagonistin wird mit dem Anblick eines Geistes konfrontiert, der verzweifelt im Raum umhergeht und ihre Hände ringt. Der Geist zeigt eine erschreckende Präsenz, bevor er sich zum Fenster beugt und in die Dunkelheit verschwindet. Diese unheimliche Begegnung wirft Fragen auf und zieht die Leser in eine Welt voller Intrigen und unerklärlicher Phänomene, während die Charaktere versuchen, die Geheimnisse des Übernatürlichen zu entschlüsseln.
Love And Hatred (1917)
- 366 Seiten
- 13 Lesestunden
The book is a facsimile reprint of an original antiquarian work, highlighting its cultural significance. Readers should be aware that it may contain imperfections typical of older texts, such as marks and notations. The reprint aims to preserve and promote literary heritage, ensuring accessibility to high-quality editions that remain faithful to the original.
This entertaining group of eight essays concerning great crimes of murder reveals the author's affinity, not only with the wellsprings of human passion, but also with the means of bringing them into lucid focus, using the slow unfolding of telling detail. Marie Belloc Lowndes made her name with murder. Her most famous book was a hugely successful novel, The Lodger, based upon the awful deeds of Jack the Ripper, which has been filmed many times. In this book she recounts eight terrible crimes which took place in France, Scotland, England, Algeria and Belgium, underscoring with clear journalistic ease cases of appalling passion, misplaced devotion, secret alliances, unbearable greed and corrosive fear of exposure. Underlying all of these cases is mystery. In one way or another, all of them had elements which initially baffled analysts; they remained partially unsolved, or at least contested, and were in some cases only concluded by the discovery of one tiny detail. Some remain mysteries to this day. This splendidly readable compendium was first published in 1914.
The Lodger
- 256 Seiten
- 9 Lesestunden
"One of the best suspense novels ever written."—The New York Times "This is a beautifully wrought novel of psychological suspense that should have a place on any mystery buff's shelf of classics."—Chicago Sun-Times The Ripper murders still arouse excitement, and The Lodger has lost none of its hushed, chilling terror over the years."—The Drood Review of Mystery Inspired by the notorious Whitechapel murders, this 1913 thriller first appeared when Jack the Ripper's brutal crimes were well within living memory. Time has done nothing to diminish the popular fascination with the serial killings. This gripping tale of an elderly English couple's growing suspicions of their sinister boarder has served as the basis for several movies, including one of Alfred Hitchcock's first films. Dover (2014) republication of the edition originally published by Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, 1913. See every Dover book in print at www.doverpublications.com
"The Chianti Flask opens at a moment of courtroom drama. An enigmatic young woman named Laura Dousland is on trial for murder, accused of poisoning her elderly husband Fordish. The couple's Italian servant, Angelo Terugi, chief witness for the prosecution, is on the stand and also under suspicion. At the heart of the puzzle of Fordish Dousland's death is the chianti flask that almost certainly held the wine containing the poison which killed him. But the flask has disappeared, and all attempts to trace it have come to nothing. The jury delivers its verdict, but this represents simply the end of the beginning of Marie Belloc Lowndes' novel. This book is in essence a psychological study into the bitter effects of murder and its aftermath both on the person accused and those close to her. Is it true that there's no smoke without fire? Only in the closing pages is the mystery of the Chianti flask finally unravelled."--Provided by publisher
The Chink in the Armor by Marie Belloc Lowndes, Fiction, Mystery & Detective, Ghost, Horror
- 216 Seiten
- 8 Lesestunden
Sylvia Bailey, a young widow at 25, embraces her newfound independence in Paris. With her striking blue eyes and light hair, she navigates life with a sense of freedom symbolized by her cherished string of pearls, which she wears almost constantly. The story explores her journey of self-discovery and the vibrant life she builds amidst the backdrop of the city.
