XYZ : A Detective Story


Book Description

XYZ by Anna Katharine Green will shock you to your very core with its twists, turns, and dark and spooky secrets. An unnamed detective must uncover the mystery of a counterfeiting crime, without getting implicated in the process. Excerpt: "Sometimes in the course of his experience, a detective, while engaged in ferreting out the mystery of one crime, runs inadvertently upon the clue to another. But rarely has this been done in a manner more unexpected or with attendant circumstances of greater interest than in the instance I am now about to relate."




X Y Z: A Detective Story


Book Description




Xyz


Book Description

An Anna Katharine Green Mystery Trilogy XYZ: A Detective Story A government agent stumbles into a crime-in-progress as he investigates a counterfeiting case. The House in the Mist Hugh arrives at a house hoping for food and a bed for the night. Instead, he finds himself at a gathering of relatives where an inheritance e is to be divided. Three Thousand Dollars A mystery surrounds a plan to steal goods from an impenetrable vault.




X Y Z


Book Description




X Y Z


Book Description




XYZ : A Detective Story


Book Description

XYZ by Anna Katharine Green will shock you to your very core with its twists, turns, and dark and spooky secrets. An unnamed detective must uncover the mystery of a counterfeiting crime, without getting implicated in the process. Excerpt: "Sometimes in the course of his experience, a detective, while engaged in ferreting out the mystery of one crime, runs inadvertently upon the clue to another. But rarely has this been done in a manner more unexpected or with attendant circumstances of greater interest than in the instance I am now about to relate."




X Y Z


Book Description

Sometimes in the course of his experience, a detective, while engaged in ferreting out the mystery of one crime, runs inadvertently upon the clue to another. But rarely has this been done in a manner more unexpected or with attendant circumstances of greater interest than in the instance I am now about to relate. For some time the penetration of certain Washington officials had been baffled by the clever devices of a gang of counterfeiters who had inundated the western portion of Massachusetts with spurious Treasury notes. Some of the best talent of the Secret Service had been expended upon the matter, but with no favorable result, when, one day, notice was received at Washington that a number of suspicious-looking letters, addressed to the simple initials, X. Y. Z., Brandon, Mass., were being daily forwarded through the mails of that region; and it being deemed possible that a clue had at last been offered to the mystery in hand, I was sent northward to investigate.




Xyz


Book Description

Sometimes in the course of his experience, a detective, while engaged in ferreting out the mystery of one crime, runs inadvertently upon the clue to another. But rarely has this been done in a manner more unexpected or with attendant circumstances of greater interest than in the instance I am now about to relate. For some time the penetration of certain Washington officials had been baffled by the clever devices of a gang of counterfeiters who had inundated the western portion of Massachusetts with spurious Treasury notes.




X Y Z


Book Description

Anna Katharine Green (November 11, 1846 - April 11, 1935) was an American poet and novelist. She was one of the first writers of detective fiction in America and distinguished herself by writing well plotted, legally accurate stories. Green has been called "the mother of the detective novel." Green is credited with shaping detective fiction into its classic form, and developing the series detective. Her main character was detective Ebenezer Gryce of the New York Metropolitan Police Force, but in three novels he is assisted by the nosy society spinster Amelia Butterworth, the prototype for Miss Marple, Miss Silver and other creations. She also invented the 'girl detective': in the character of Violet Strange, a debutante with a secret life as a sleuth. Indeed, as journalist Kathy Hickman writes, Green "stamped the mystery genre with the distinctive features that would influence writers from Agatha Christie and Conan Doyle to contemporary authors of suspenseful "whodunits." In addition to creating elderly spinster and young female sleuths, Green's innovative plot devices included dead bodies in libraries, newspaper clippings as "clews," the coroner's inquest, and expert witnesses. Yale Law School once used her books to demonstrate how damaging it can be to rely on circumstantial evidence. Written in 1878, her first book, The Leavenworth Case: A Lawyer's Story, sparked a debate in the Pennsylvania Senate over whether the book could "really have been written by a woman." Green was in some ways a progressive woman for her time-succeeding in a genre dominated by male writers-but she did not approve of many of her feminist contemporaries, and she was opposed to women's suffrage.




X Y Z


Book Description

"Sometimes in the course of his experience, a detective, while engaged in ferreting out the mystery of one crime,runs inadvertently upon the clue to another. But rarely has this been done in a manner more unexpected or withattendant circumstances of greater interest than in the instance I am now about to relate.For some time the penetration of certain Washington officials had been baffled by the clever devices of agang of counterfeiters who had inundated the western portion of Massachusetts with spurious Treasury notes.Some of the best talent of the Secret Service had been expended upon the matter, but with no favorable result, when, one day,notice was received at Washington that a number of suspicious-looking letters, addressed to the simple initials, X. Y. Z., Brandon, Mass.,were being daily forwarded through the mails of that region; and it being deemed possiblethat a clue had at last been offered to the mystery in hand, I was sent northward to investigate."