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Douglas Clark

    Cet auteur britannique a exploré les aspects profonds de l'expérience humaine dans son œuvre. Son écriture se caractérise par une perspicacité aiguë et une approche stylistique distinctive. Ses lecteurs sont souvent incités à réfléchir sur les complexités de la vie à travers ses explorations littéraires. Sa production est appréciée pour sa profondeur intellectuelle et sa résonance émotionnelle.

    Articles of Faith
    Death After Evensong
    Gunboat Justice Volume 3
    Belfast, A Novel of the Troubles
    Sweet Poison (Masters and Green, Band 4)
    Gunboat Justice Volume 1
    • Gunboat Justice Volume 1

      • 478pages
      • 17 heures de lecture
      4,3(4)Évaluer

      The book explores the historical impact of extraterritoriality in China, Japan, and Korea during the mid-19th century, focusing on the establishment of foreign consular courts that operated for over a century. It features a diverse cast of characters and addresses various challenges faced by these courts, such as war, corruption, and rebellion. Doug Clark, a seasoned lawyer with extensive experience in the region, draws on extensive archival research to vividly portray this intriguing and often overlooked aspect of legal history, revealing its lasting effects on contemporary views in these countries.

      Gunboat Justice Volume 1
    • The death of Fay Partridge, a young widow who ran the very select Throstlecombe Holiday Camp on the north coast of Devon, presented the police with a singular problem. Her death posed the question, first of all, of how rather than who... For Mrs Partridge died very suddenly of a liver complaint most unlikely in a woman of her age. And her two poodles, whom she had taken to the vet on the day of her death, expired the same day from the same cause. Toxic necrosis was the verdict on each, but neither the doctor who conducted the post-mortem on Mrs Partridge, nor the veterinary surgeon who examined the poodles, could find any trace of poison to account for the condition. For Detective Chief Inspector George Masters and his team, the assignment was something of a relaxation. The Holiday Camp in high summer was a very pleasant place in which to work, the accommodation unusually attractive. But how to find a murderer without knowing the means by which the murder was committed presented Masters with a considerable challenge to his ingenuity... Douglas Clark was born in Lincolnshire, 1919. He wrote over 20 crime novels and under other names, including James Ditton and Peter Hosier.

      Sweet Poison (Masters and Green, Band 4)
    • Belfast, A Novel of the Troubles

      • 316pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      4,0(1)Évaluer

      The Republic of Ireland came into being in 1921, at the end of a bloody insurrection against the British. However, the treaty left the northern six counties under British sovereignty. Since that time, the Protestant majority has dominated the poorer Catholic populace with support from the British Army. In 1972, British troops fired on demonstrators, launching more than twenty-five years of sectarian violence and terror from both sides. Mason Devereux, an American freelance photojournalist, is drawn into doing a project on the violence while visiting Northern Ireland. Devereux makes contact with the Irish Republican Army. The I.R.A. is interested in publicity showing Protestant paramilitaries' violence against Catholics. A deal is struck and Devereux is given access to extraordinary photo opportunities. Devereux accepts the I.R.A.'s assistance, but finds his own way to get incriminating photographs of the I.R.A's own violence. On the verge of a negotiated end of the violence with the British government, a renegade faction of the Irish Republican Army, lead by seventies legendary gunman Michael Flynn, derails that movement toward peace. Flynn and Devereux cross paths in a sequence of violent events that continues the tragedy of Northern Ireland's Troubles.

      Belfast, A Novel of the Troubles
    • Gunboat Justice Volume 3

      • 334pages
      • 12 heures de lecture
      3,5(2)Évaluer

      The book explores the historical impact of extraterritoriality in China, Japan, and Korea during the mid-19th century, highlighting the establishment of consular courts by Britain and the United States. It delves into the complexities faced by these courts, including issues of war, corruption, and justice, through the lens of a diverse cast of characters. Author Doug Clark, a practicing lawyer with extensive experience in the region, draws on archival research to vividly recreate this often-overlooked chapter in history and its lasting effects on East-West relations.

      Gunboat Justice Volume 3
    • Articles of Faith

      • 48pages
      • 2 heures de lecture
      3,8(4)Évaluer

      A beautiful conjunction of the late Douglas Clark's minimalist poetry and photography, this book transforms the mundane detritus of our collective past into a series of contemporary illuminations. Articles of Faith are found, given, fought for, hoarded and cherished ...They are the marks we leave in passing.' -- Douglas Clark

      Articles of Faith
    • A cozy dinner party assumes a sinister air when Daphne Bymeres, one of Wanda Mace's house guests, is found dead next morning. What is most awkward is the fact that Daphne's husband, David, and Wanda were lovers. But surely neither David nor Wanda would invite suspicion by attempting to murder Daphne in Wanda's own house? And the intrigue thickens when Superintendent Masters and Inspector Green of Scotland Yard are called in and note that the cause of death was not poison but rather cerebral hemorrhage. So how was Daphne killed -- if, indeed, she was killed? An ingenious puzzle -- with a beautiful solution.

      Table D'Hote
    • Critical Mass

      • 476pages
      • 17 heures de lecture

      Would history be changed with the discovery of another highly placed Soviet spy within the WWII Manhattan Project? Such a spy had always been the subject of speculation. The impact of the principle Soviet spy, Klaus Fuchs, would take on new significance with this parallel super spy. What if that spy also continued to provide the Soviet Union with U.S. nuclear weapons intelligence related to the thermonuclear hydrogen bomb development after WWII? History would conclude that Soviet espionage penetration was decidedly instrumental in advancing Soviet nuclear weapons development by years. That would arguably make this newly discovered spy singularly instrumental in advancing what became the Cold War.

      Critical Mass
    • Justice by Gunboat

      • 496pages
      • 18 heures de lecture

      The book explores the tumultuous history of British and American courts in China, Japan, and Korea from the mid-19th century, highlighting the complexities of extraterritoriality established through coercive treaties. It delves into the myriad challenges faced by these foreign courts, including war, corruption, and crime, while also revealing the personal stories of judges and lawyers involved. This unique lens sheds light on the significant impact of these courts on the modern trajectories of China and Japan, framing their contrasting historical perspectives.

      Justice by Gunboat
    • Southland Noir

      • 378pages
      • 14 heures de lecture

      Set in the vibrant Jazz Age of 1926, the story unfolds in Los Angeles and Hollywood, capturing the era's essence. Egan Walsh, an IRA veteran, grapples with the aftermath of the Irish War of Independence and a contentious treaty that risks civil war. Choosing to distance himself from conflict, he departs Ireland for Boston, seeking a new path amidst the tumult of his past. The narrative explores themes of loyalty, identity, and the struggle for peace in a world marked by division.

      Southland Noir