A Voice Like Velvet (Detective Club Crime Classics)
By (Author) Donald Henderson
Introduction by Martin Edwards
HarperCollins Publishers
Collins Crime Club
27th August 2021
29th April 2021
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Historical crime and mysteries
Classic crime and mystery fiction
Adventure / action fiction
Thriller / suspense fiction
823.912
Paperback
240
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 16mm
170g
A sensational wartime crime novel about a BBC announcer who abuses his position to commit crimes against the rich and famous
By day Ernest Bisham is a velvet-voiced announcer for the BBC; the whole country recognises the sound of his meticulous pronouncements. By night, however, Mr Bisham is a cat-burglar, careless about his loot, but revelling in the danger and excitement of his running contest with Scotland Yard. But as he gets away with more and more daring escapades, there will come a time when he goes too far . . .
When Donald Hendersons Mr Bowling Buys a Newspaper caused something of a sensation, his publishers were keen to capitalise on their authors popularity, quickly reissuing The Announcer (originally published under his pen-name D. H. Landels) with the more alluring title A Voice Like Velvet. Despite a small edition of just 3,000 copies, it was his best reviewed work, as suspenseful and offbeat as his earlier success.
This Detective Club classic includes an introduction by The Golden Age of Murders Martin Edwards, who explores Hendersons own BBC career and the long established tradition of books about gentlemen crooks. The book also includes a rare Henderson short story, the chilling The Alarm Bell.
Skilfuly written and quietly suspensefulMartin Edwards
Combines a psychopathic study with [an] effective hare and hounds adventureKirkus Reviews
Ah, just the sort of book I likeDaily Express
People who have a weakness for stories about gentlemen crooksand judging by the popularity of Raffles, Get-Rich-Quick Wallingford, etc., there are thousands of themwill be delighted to make the acquaintance of Ernest Bisham.
Donald Landels Henderson was born in 1905; he had a twin sister, but their mother died four days after giving birth. Their father re-married when the twins were four, and Henderson was to say, I cannot pretend to have enjoyed anything very much about my childhood or adolescence. Since his teens, he had enjoyed acting, and had also dreamed of becoming a writer. He joined a touring repertory company, and married an actress called Janet Morrison, a single parent who later gave up her son for adoption. The marriage soon failed, and the couple separated. Henderson began to combine writing with his acting career, but this was a period of worldwide economic depressionthe Slumpand money was always short. After a failed theatrical venture in London, in a fearful burst of enthusiasm I sat down and wrote three novels running, scarcely leaving myself time to think them out, so anxious was I to get farther and farther away from the brink of the precipice. Henderson worked for the BBC in London during the war, when a German bomb fell on the house where he resided. He was rescued, but his lungs were badly damaged. It is possible that the episode precipitated his death at only 44, in 1947, just three years after the publication of Mr Bowling Buys a Newspaper.