by
P.M. Hubbard
Garden City, New York: Published for The
Crime Club by Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1979.
First
edition in the United States (stated).
Remainder spray to the lower page edges, else near fine; in a near fine dust jacket with modest edge wear, soiling to the rear panel, and several tears along the front fore-edge flap fold.
"For the past 20 years, Ben Selby has been living alone and working away
at an ordinary job; but before that, many years ago, he was part of a
not-quite-legal band of mercenaries.
When Peter Gaston, Selby's
former boss, turns up stabbed to death near his holiday cottage, Selby
begins to wonder whether his death is related to the band's last
mission, in which priceless treason was lost at sea. Teaming up with
Gaston's widow, Selby heads back to the scene of the shipwreck: he for
profit, she for revenge.
Praised by critics for his clean prose
style, characterisation, and the strong sense of place in his novels,
Philip Maitland Hubbard was born in Reading, Berkshire and brought up in
the Channel Islands. He was educated at Oxford, where he won the
Newdigate Prize for English verse in 1933. From 1934 until its
disbandment in 1947 he served with the Indian civil service, then for
the British Council, before retiring to work as a freelance writer. He
contributed to a number of publications, including Punch, and
wrote 16 novels for adults and two children's books. He lived in Dorset
and Scotland, and many of his novels draw on his interest in and
knowledge of rural pursuits and folk religion."--Fantastic Fiction.
Listed in Keating's 100 Best Crime & Mystery Books.