The Wychford Poisoning Case
By (Author) Anthony Berkeley
Introduction by Tony Medawar
HarperCollins Publishers
Collins Crime Club
7th September 2021
4th February 2021
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Crime and mystery: private investigator / amateur detectives
Classic crime and mystery fiction
Fiction based on or inspired by true events
823.912
Paperback
240
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 15mm
170g
A classic British crime novel from the Golden Age perhaps the first ever psychological crime novel by the founder of the Detection Club, marking 50 years since the death of the author.
Mrs Bentley has been arrested for murder. The evidence is overwhelming: arsenic she extracted from fly papers was in her husbands medicine, his food and his lemonade, and her crimes are being plastered across the newspapers. Even her lawyers believe she is guilty. But Roger Sheringham, the brilliant but outspoken young novelist, is convinced that there is too much evidence against Mrs Bentley and sets out to prove her innocence.
Credited as the book that first introduced psychology to the detective novel, The Wychford Poisoning Case was based on a notorious real-life murder inquiry. Written by Anthony Berkeley, a founder of the celebrated Detection Club who also found fame under the pen-name Francis Iles, the story saw the return of Roger Sheringham, the Golden Ages breeziest and booziest detective.
Detection and crime at its wittiest all Berkeleys stories are amusing, intriguing and he is a master of the final twist.
Agatha Christie
Anthony Berkeley is the supreme master not of the twist but of the double-twist. Milward Kennedy in the Sunday Times
Anthony Berkeley was a pen name of Anthony Berkeley Cox (1893-1971), one of the most important figures in the history of British crime fiction. Many of his novels feature the amateur criminologist Roger Sheringham. As well as being the author of many classic detective stories, Berkeley was the founder of the prestigious Detection Club for the finest crime writers.