
| ASIN: | B00F3NGOAY |
| Publisher: | Harper Paperbacks |
| Published: | 12 April, 2011 |
| Language: | English |
| Editions: |
99 other editions
of this product
|
| Genre: | Crime Fiction |
- 0.5 The Tuesday Club Murders
- 1 The Murder at the Vicarage
- 1.1 The Thirteen Problems
- 1.5 The Regatta Mystery and Other Stories
- 2 The Body in the Library
- 2 So much blood
- 3 The Moving Finger
- 3 Star Trap
- 4 A Murder is Announced
- 4 An Amateur Corpse
- 5 A Comedian Dies
- 5 They Do it with Mirrors
- 6 The Dead Side of the Mike
- 6 A Pocket Full of Rye
- 7 4:50 from Paddington
- 7 Situation Tragedy
- 7.1 The Adventure of the Christmas Pudding
- 8 The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side
- 8 Murder Unprompted
- 8 The Agatha Christie Collection
- 9 A Caribbean Mystery
- 9 Murder In The Title (Charles Paris Mysteries)
- 10 At Bertram's Hotel
- 10 Not Dead, Only Resting
- 10 One, Two, Buckle My Shoe
- 11 Dead Giveaway
- 11 Nemesis
- 12 Sleeping Murder
- 12 What Bloody Man Is That?
- 13 Miss Marple's Final Cases
- 13 A Series of Murders: A Charles Paris Mystery (Radio Crimes)
- 14 Corporate Bodies
- 15 A Reconstructed Corpse
- 16 Sicken and So Die
- 17 Dead Room Farce
- 18 A Decent Interval
- 19 Cinderella Killer: a Theatrical Mystery Starring Actor-sleuth Charles Paris
- 20 Deadly Habit
- SS 15-17 Three Blind Mice and Other Stories
- SS 15-17 Three Blind Mice
- SS 19-20 Double Sin, and Other Stories
- 0.5, 13 Miss Marple: The Complete Short Stories
- 0.5, 13 Miss Marple
- Miss Marple's Final Cases: Three new BBC Radio 4 full-cast dramas
- /...
- 4:50 from Paddington
- A Caribbean Mystery
In Agatha Christie’s baffling detective story, Nemesis, a letter from a dead man instructs Miss Marple how to conduct an investigation into a puzzlingly unspecific crime.
In utter disbelief, Miss Marple read the letter addressed to her from the recently deceased Mr. Rafiel—an acquaintance she had met briefly on her travels. He had left instructions for her to investigate a crime after his death. The only problem was, he had failed to tell her who was involved or where and when the crime had been committed. It was most intriguing.
Soon she is faced with a new crime—the ultimate crime—murder. It seems someone is adamant that past evils remained buried. . . .











