FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #667: SEXTON BLAKE, DETECTIVE Edited by George Mann

In his excellent “Introduction,” Michael Moorcock provides a grand overview of the Sexton Blake series that has been popular with British readers from 1893 to 1978, comprising more than 4,000 stories by some 200 different authors. This Big Fat volume, 757 pages, provides a rich sampling of Sexton Blake series over its long history. Several of the best Sexton Blake writers are represented here.

Editor George Mann mixes short stories with longer Sexton Blake adventures to capture a good sense of the best of the series. If you’re interested in a classic British detective, this is the book you should start with. GRADE: A

Acknowledgements

Publisher’s Note

Introduction by Michael Moorcock — 12

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

A Duel to the Death/Anthony Scene — 18

Well Matched/Ernest Sempill — 58

Waldo the Wonder-Man/Edwy Searles Brooks — 65

The Bar Diamond/Ernest Stempill — 103

The Sacred Sphere/GH Teed — 110

Parried!/Ernest Sempill — 204

The Great Bank Fraud/Lewis Cartron — 211

Quits!/Ernest Stempill — 265

The Boundary Raiders/Andrew Murray — 271

The Removal of Mr. Soames/Ernest Sempill — 316

The Inari Treasure/Cecil Hayter — 323

The Case of the Louis Quinze Snuff-Box/Ernest Sempill — 368

Tinker’s Terrible Test/Andrew Murray — 374

Abducted!/Ernest Sempill — 424

The Gnomid/Gilbert Chester — 431

Blake Scores!/Ernest Sempill — 471

Lord of the Ape-Men/Robert Murray — 478

A Mysterious Disappearance/Cecil Hayter — 516

A Mystery in Motley/Anthony Skene — 523

Trapped!/Ernest Sempill — 561

Suspended From Duty/Gwyn Evans — 568

The Great Bridge Tunnel Mystery/Ernest Sempill — 604

They Shall Repay!/GH Teed — 612

Found Guilty!/Ernest Sempell — 618

The Next Move/GH Teed, Gwyn Evans, Robert Murray, Anthony Skene — 655

The Christmas Cavilier/Gwyn Evans — 747

Bibliography — 755

19 thoughts on “FRIDAY’S FORGOTTEN BOOKS #667: SEXTON BLAKE, DETECTIVE Edited by George Mann

  1. Jeff Meyerson

    I used to pick up a lot of those skinny digest-sized Blakes in England, which you could generally find pretty cheap and often in pretty good shape. There were a bunch of different people who wrote them, some of them writing dozens. I think I did read one, maybe a collection of three stories (?), but don’t remember which. They are short and fast reads.

    Reply
      1. Jerry House

        George, Moorcock was also a contributor to the Sexton Blake saga. Some others were John Creasy, Jack Trevor Story (who wrote THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY and for whom the Jack Trevor Story Memorail cup is named — the winner must spend all the prize money in a week to a fortnight, with having nothing to show for it), and, reportedly, Brian O’Nolan (who, as “Flann O’Brien” wrote THE THIRD POLICEMAN and AT SWIM-TWO-BIRDS).

    1. george Post author

      Jeff, I can’t figure the Bills out. They get creamed by the Colts 41-15 and four days later the Bills cream the Saints 31-6. Go figure…

      Reply
  2. Rick Robinson

    I may have read a Blake story in another anthology, but don’t have a collection of them. Obviously not Holmes, the Baker Street mention in the cover blurb is an obvious misnomer.

    Reply
    1. Jeff Meyerson

      Sexton Blake is a fictional detective with similarities to Sherlock Holmes. They appeared on the scene within a few years of each other, the first Holmes story being published in 1887 and the first Sexton Blake story in 1893.

      Both are portrayed as private consulting detectives operating from London’s Baker Street.

      I guess that was deliberate, then.

      Reply
      1. wolf

        Baker St brings back memories – was there but somehow missed the Sherlock Holmes Museum, went to Madame Tussaud’s instead.

  3. Cap'n Bob Napier

    I never read a Blake! No particular reason; likely I just never came across one! I much enjoyed the spanking the Bills gave the hated Saints yesterday!

    Reply

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