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The Witch of the Low Tide

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Language
  
English

Originally published
  
1961

Country
  
United Kingdom

3.8/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
1961

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Publisher
  
Hamish Hamilton (UK) & Harper (USA)

Media type
  
Print (Hardback & Paperback)

Pages
  
186 pp (Bantam #H3639, paperback edition, 1964)

Genres
  
Mystery, Detective fiction, Historical Fiction

Similar
  
John Dickson Carr books, Detective fiction books

The Witch of the Low Tide, first published in 1961, is a detective story/historical novel by John Dickson Carr set in the England of 1907. This novel is a mystery of the type known as a locked room mystery (or a subset of that type called an "impossible mystery") as well as being a historical novel.

Plot summary

David Garth, M.D., has fallen in love with the beautiful widow Betty, Lady Calder. Detective-Inspector Twigg of Scotland Yard tries to warn Dr. Garth about the chequered past of Lady Calder, but it takes all the nerve of Garth's friend Cullingford Abbot, assistant to the Commissioner of Scotland Yard, to state that, among other things, Betty danced for three seasons at the Moulin Rouge and is thought to have joined a Satanist group in Paris. She is also reputed to be a blackmailer responsible for at least two suicides. However, Betty herself raises the possibility that she is being mistaken for the machinations of her sister Glynis. When Glynis is found dead on the beach near a bathing-pavilion, in the middle of a stretch of unmarked sand, Betty is suspected of arranging the death (although no one can suggest how it might have happened). It takes Dr. Garth's special knowledge of both medicine (the new science of "psychanalysis") and literature like Gaston Leroux's The Mystery of the Yellow Room to solve the impossible crime and reveal the criminal.

References

The Witch of the Low Tide Wikipedia


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