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Joseph Jefferson Farjeon

Joseph Jefferson Farjeon (4 June 1883 – 6 June 1955) was an English crime and mystery novelist, playwright and screenwriter. His father, brother and sister also developed successful careers in the literary world. His "Ben" novels were reissued in 2015 and 2016.

Joseph Jefferson Farjeon
Born4 June 1883
Hampstead, London, England
Died6 June 1955 (aged 72)
Hove, Sussex, England
Occupation(s)Writer, playwright

Family

Born in Hampstead, London,[1] Farjeon was the grandson of the American actor Joseph Jefferson, after whom he was named.[2] His parents were Jefferson's daughter Maggie (1853–1935) and Benjamin Farjeon (1838–1903), a Victorian novelist, who was born in Whitechapel to an impoverished immigrant family and travelled widely before returning to England in 1868. Joseph Jefferson Farjeon's brothers were Herbert, a dramatist and scholar, and Harry, who became a composer. His sister Eleanor became a children's author.[3] His daughter Joan Jefferson Farjeon (1913–2006) was a theatre set designer.[4]

Career: "creepy skill"

Farjeon worked for ten years for Amalgamated Press in London before going freelance, working nine hours a day at his writing desk.[5] One of Farjeon's best known works was a 1925 play, Number 17, which was adapted into several films, including Number Seventeen (1932) directed by Alfred Hitchcock, and joined the UK Penguin Crime series as a novel in 1939. He also wrote the screenplay for Michael Powell's My Friend the King (1932) and provided the story for Bernard Vorhaus's The Ghost Camera (1933).[6]

Farjeon's crime novels were admired by Dorothy L. Sayers, who called him "unsurpassed for creepy skill in mysterious adventures".[2] His obituarist in The Times talked of "ingenious and entertaining plots and characterization," while The New York Times, reviewing an early novel, Master Criminal (1924), states that "Mr. Farjeon displays a great deal of knowledge about story-telling... and multiplies the interest of his plot through a terse, telling style and a rigid compression." The Saturday Review of Literature called Death in the Inkwell (1942) an "amusing, satirical, and frequently hair-raising yarn of an author who got dangerously mixed up with his imaginary characters."[7]

A significant revival of interest in the Golden age of detective fiction followed the 2014 success of The British Library reissue of Mystery in White: A Christmas Crime Story.[2] Two more reissues by Farjeon followed in 2015: Thirteen Guests and The Z Murders. Mystery in White is also one of at least three of his novels to have appeared in Italian,[8] French, Dutch (Het mysterie in de sneeuw – The Mystery in the Snow), German,[9] Spanish, Polish and Russian.[citation needed]

Seven Dead has been reissued by The British Library (September 2017). The novel sees the return of Detective-Inspector Kendall, first heard of, in the words of its central character "in the case of the Thirteen Guests. What I liked about him was that he didn't play the violin, or have a wooden leg or anything of that sort. He just got on with it."

Since 2016, all eight Detective Ben novels have been reissued by HarperCollins from the Collins Crime Club archive as a series titled "Ben the tramp mystery".[10][11][12]

Selected works

Crime fiction and other works

  • The Master Criminal (London, Brentano's, 1924)
  • The Confusing Friendship (London, Brentano's, 1924)
  • Little Things That Happen (London, Methuen, 1925)
  • Uninvited Guests (London, Brentano's, 1925)
  • At the Green Dragon (London, Harrap, 1926) [US title: The Green Dragon, New York, Dial Press, 1926]
  • The Crook's Shadow (London, Harrap, 1927)
  • More Little Happenings (London, Methuen, 1928)
  • The House of Disappearance (New York, A. L. Burt, 1928). Serialised as ‘’The Greystones Mystery’’, Daily Mirror, 1927
  • Underground (New York, A. L. Burt, 1928) [alternative title: Mystery Underground, 1932]
  • Shadows by the Sea (London, Harrap, 1928)
  • The Appointed Date (London, 1929)
  • The 5:18 Mystery (1929)
  • The Person Called Z (1929)
  • Following Footsteps (1930)
  • The Mystery on the Moor (London, Collins, 1930)
  • The Z Murders (London, Collins, 1932)
  • Trunk Call (London, Collins, 1932) [US title: The Trunk Call Mystery, New York, Dial Press, 1932]
  • Sometimes Life's Funny (London, Collins, 1933)
  • The Mystery of the Creek (London, Collins, 1933) [US title: The House on the Marsh, New York, Dial Press, 1933]
  • Dead Man's Heath (London, Collins, 1933) [US title: The Mystery of Dead Man's Heath, New York, Dodd, Mead & Co., 1934]
  • Old Man Mystery (London, Collins, 1933)
  • Fancy Dress Ball (London, Collins, 1934) [US title: Death in Fancy Dress, Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1939]
  • The Windmill Mystery (London, Collins, 1934)
  • Sinister Inn (London, Collins, 1934)
  • The Golden Singer (1935)
  • His Lady Secretary (1935)
  • Mountain Mystery (1935)
  • Holiday Express (London, Collins, 1935)
  • The Adventure of Edward (1936)
  • Thirteen Guests (London, Collins, 1936)
  • Dangerous Beauty (London, Collins, 1936)
  • Yellow Devil (1937)
  • Holiday at Half Mast (London, Collins, 1937)
  • Mystery in White (1937)
  • The Compleat Smuggler (1938)
  • Dark Lady (1938)
  • End of An Author (1938) [US title: Death in the Inkwell, Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1942]
  • Seven Dead (1939)
  • Exit John Horton (1939) [US title: Friday the 13th, Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1940]
  • Facing Death: Tales Told on a Sinking Raft (1940)
  • Aunt Sunday Sees It Through (1940) [US title: Aunt Sunday Takes Command, Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1940]
  • Room Number 6 (1941)
  • The Third Victim (1941)
  • The Judge Sums Up (1942)
  • The House of Shadows (1943)
  • Greenmask (1944)
  • Black Castle (1944)
  • Rona Runs Away (1945)
  • The Oval Table (1946)
  • Peril in the Pyrenees (1946)
  • The Works of Smith Minor (1947)
  • Back To Victoria (1947)
  • Benelogues (1948)
  • The Llewellyn Jewel Mystery (1948)
  • Death of a World (1948)
  • The Adventure at Eighty (1948)
  • Prelude To Crime (1948)
  • The Lone House Mystery (1949)
  • The Impossible Guest (1949)
  • The Shadow of Thirteen (1949)
  • The Disappearances of Uncle David (1949)
  • Change With Me (1950)
  • Mother Goes Gay (1950)
  • Cause Unknown (1950)
  • Mystery on Wheels (1951)
  • The House Over the Tunnel (1951)
  • Adventure For Nine (1951)
  • The Double Crime (1953)
  • The Mystery of the Map (1953)
  • Money Walks (1953)
  • Castle of Fear (1954)
  • Bob Hits the Headlines (1954)
  • The Caravan Adventure (1955)

Detective Ben series

  • No. 17 (London, Hodder and Stoughton, 1926)
  • The House Opposite (London, Collins, 1931)
  • Murderer's Trail (London, Collins, 1931) [US title: Phantom Fingers; New York, Dial Press, 1931]
  • Ben Sees It Through (London, Collins, 1932)
  • Little God Ben (London, Collins, 1935)
  • Detective Ben (London, Collins, 1936)
  • Ben on the Job (London, Collins, 1952)
  • Number Nineteen (London, Collins, 1952)

Under the pseudonym Anthony Swift

  • Murder at a Police Station (London, Hale, 1943)
  • November the Ninth at Kersea (London, Hale, 1944)
  • Interrupted Honeymoon (London, Hale, 1945)

The Detective X. Crook series

J.J. Farjeon's fictional character Detective X. Crook appeared from 1925–1929 in 57 issues of Flynn’s Weekly Detective Fiction.[13]

  • Red Eye (20 June 1925)
  • The Bilton Safe (27 June 1925)
  • The Way to Death (4 July 1925)
  • Thomas Doubts No Longer (11 July 1925)
  • Fisherman’s Luck (18 July 1925)
  • Where the Treasure Is (1 August 1925)
  • The Hidden Death (8 August 1925)
  • Nine Hours to Live (22 August 1925)
  • Elsie Cuts Both Ways (29 August 1925)
  • Crook’s Code (19 December 1925)
  • Percy the Pickpocket (26 December 1925)
  • A Race for Life (2 January 1926)
  • Seeing’s Believing (9 January 1926)
  • The Deserted Inn (23 January 1926)
  • Death’s Grim Symbol (6 February 1926)
  • Crook Goes Back to Prison (10 April 1926)
  • Who Killed James Fyne (17 April 1926)
  • Caleb Comes Back (24 April 1926)
  • The Vanished Gift (1 May 1926)
  • The Death That Beckoned (15 May 1926)
  • Footprints in the Snow (17 July 1926)
  • The Shadow (24 July 1926)
  • Cats Are Evil (14 August 1926)
  • The Silent House (28 August 1926)
  • The Kleptomaniac (18 September 1926)
  • The Knife (23 October 1926)
  • The Hotel Hold-up (20 November 1926)
  • The Silent Client (27 November 1926)
  • Darkness (11 December 1926)
  • It Pays To Be Honest (18 December 1926)
  • Kidnaped (25 December 1926)
  • Whose Hand? (8 January 1927)
  • The Datchett Diamond (29 January 1927)
  • Vanishing Gems (5 February 1927)
  • The Murder Club (26 February 1927)
  • LQ585 (5 March 1927)
  • The Stolen Hand Bag (19 March 1927)
  • Prescription 93b (26 March 1927)
  • The Thing in the Room (7 May 1927)
  • In the Diamond Line (28 May 1927)
  • The New Baronet (4 June 1927)
  • The Fourth Attempt (9 July 1927)
  • The Absconding Treasurer (23 July 1927)
  • The Man Who Forgot (3 September 1927)
  • No Motive Apparent (24 September 1927)
  • The Cleverness of Crockett (29 October 1927)
  • August 13th (8 September 1928)
  • The Photograph (15 September 1928)
  • Between Calais and Dover (22 September 1928)
  • The Bloodstained Handkerchief (6 October 1928)
  • Wanted (13 October 1928)
  • The Third Act (29 December 1928)
  • The Secret of the Snow (9 February 1929)
  • Open Warfare (16 February 1929)
  • The Photographic Touch (9 March 1929)
  • The "Times" Advertisement (30 March 1929)
  • The Golden Idol (13 April 1929)

Short story collections

  • Down the Green Stairs and Other Stories (Down the Green Stairs, February the Seventh, It Happened in a Fog, Tomatoes in Egg-Cups) (London, Todd, 1943)
  • Waiting for the Police and Other Short Stories (The Other Side of the Bars, Waiting for the Police, Where's Mr. Jones?) (London, Todd, 1943)
  • The Invisible Companion and Other Stories (February the Seventh, In Reverse, The Invisible Companion, The Room That Got Lost, Supper Is Served) (London, Todd, 1943)
  • The Twist and Other Stories (The Twist, The Room, In Reverse) (London, Vallancey Press, 1944)
  • The Haunted Lake and Other Stories (The Haunted Lake, Midnight Adventure, Supper is Served, Exchange is No Robbery) (London, Polybooks, 1945)
  • Midnight Adventure and Other Stories (Midnight Adventure, The Vase and the Candlestick, Waiting for the Police, It Happened in the Fog, Exchange is No Robbery) (London & New York, Polybooks, 1946)

Other short stories

  • The Tale of a Hat (A Romance of the Thames); Pearson's Magazine, issue 172, April 1910[14]
  • Unanswered Riddles; Pearson's Magazine, issue 201, September 1912[15]
  • Romance Passes By; My Best Thriller. A Collection of Stories Chosen by Their Own Authors, London: Faber, 1933[16]
  • The Room in the Tower; My Best Mystery Story: A Collection of Stories Chosen by Their Own Authors, London: Faber, 1939[17]
  • Secrets in the Snow; Stories of the Underworld, London: Faber, 1942[18]
  • Sergeant Dobbin Works It Out; Evening Standard Detective Book: Second Series, London: Gollancz, 1951[19]

Plays

References

  1. ^ "Search Results for England & Wales Births 1837-2006".
  2. ^ a b c In Edwards's Introduction to the 2014 reissue of Mystery in White. A Christmas Crime Storey (London: British Library, [1937]).
  3. ^ Lewis Melville, "Farjeon, Benjamin Leopold (1838–1903)", rev. William Baker. ODNB, Oxford University Press, 2004 Retrieved 21 November 2014, pay-walled.
  4. ^ Obituary in The Independent, 14 August 2006. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  5. ^ Publisher's biographical note in the Penguin Crime edition of the novelized No. 17.
  6. ^ IMDb. Retrieved 21 November 2014.[unreliable source?]
  7. ^ gadetection site. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  8. ^ As Sotto la neve Polillo Editore site Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  9. ^ Drei Raben Verlag Retrieved 21 November 2014.
  10. ^ "HarperCollins". harpercollins.com. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  11. ^ "LibraryThing". librarything.com. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  12. ^ "WorldCat". worldcat.org. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  13. ^ "Mystery File". 4 December 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2019.
  14. ^ "GalacticCentral". philsp.com. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  15. ^ "GalacticCentral". philsp.com. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  16. ^ WorldCat. worldcat.org. OCLC 1475931. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
  17. ^ WorldCat. worldcat.org. OCLC 21093490. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
  18. ^ WorldCat. worldcat.org. OCLC 13227905. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
  19. ^ WorldCat. worldcat.org. OCLC 30166907. Retrieved 21 January 2022.

Other sources

  • Bordman, Gerald Martin. American Theatre: A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama, 1914–1930. Oxford University Press, 1995.
  • Krueger, Christine L. Encyclopedia of British Writers, 19th Century. Infobase Publishing, 2003.

External links

joseph, jefferson, farjeon, june, 1883, june, 1955, english, crime, mystery, novelist, playwright, screenwriter, father, brother, sister, also, developed, successful, careers, literary, world, novels, were, reissued, 2015, 2016, born4, june, 1883hampstead, lon. Joseph Jefferson Farjeon 4 June 1883 6 June 1955 was an English crime and mystery novelist playwright and screenwriter His father brother and sister also developed successful careers in the literary world His Ben novels were reissued in 2015 and 2016 Joseph Jefferson FarjeonBorn4 June 1883Hampstead London EnglandDied6 June 1955 aged 72 Hove Sussex EnglandOccupation s Writer playwright Contents 1 Family 2 Career creepy skill 3 Selected works 3 1 Crime fiction and other works 3 2 Detective Ben series 3 3 Under the pseudonym Anthony Swift 3 4 The Detective X Crook series 3 5 Short story collections 3 6 Other short stories 3 7 Plays 4 References 5 Other sources 6 External linksFamily EditBorn in Hampstead London 1 Farjeon was the grandson of the American actor Joseph Jefferson after whom he was named 2 His parents were Jefferson s daughter Maggie 1853 1935 and Benjamin Farjeon 1838 1903 a Victorian novelist who was born in Whitechapel to an impoverished immigrant family and travelled widely before returning to England in 1868 Joseph Jefferson Farjeon s brothers were Herbert a dramatist and scholar and Harry who became a composer His sister Eleanor became a children s author 3 His daughter Joan Jefferson Farjeon 1913 2006 was a theatre set designer 4 Career creepy skill EditFarjeon worked for ten years for Amalgamated Press in London before going freelance working nine hours a day at his writing desk 5 One of Farjeon s best known works was a 1925 play Number 17 which was adapted into several films including Number Seventeen 1932 directed by Alfred Hitchcock and joined the UK Penguin Crime series as a novel in 1939 He also wrote the screenplay for Michael Powell s My Friend the King 1932 and provided the story for Bernard Vorhaus s The Ghost Camera 1933 6 Farjeon s crime novels were admired by Dorothy L Sayers who called him unsurpassed for creepy skill in mysterious adventures 2 His obituarist in The Times talked of ingenious and entertaining plots and characterization while The New York Times reviewing an early novel Master Criminal 1924 states that Mr Farjeon displays a great deal of knowledge about story telling and multiplies the interest of his plot through a terse telling style and a rigid compression The Saturday Review of Literature called Death in the Inkwell 1942 an amusing satirical and frequently hair raising yarn of an author who got dangerously mixed up with his imaginary characters 7 A significant revival of interest in the Golden age of detective fiction followed the 2014 success of The British Library reissue of Mystery in White A Christmas Crime Story 2 Two more reissues by Farjeon followed in 2015 Thirteen Guests and The Z Murders Mystery in White is also one of at least three of his novels to have appeared in Italian 8 French Dutch Het mysterie in de sneeuw The Mystery in the Snow German 9 Spanish Polish and Russian citation needed Seven Dead has been reissued by The British Library September 2017 The novel sees the return of Detective Inspector Kendall first heard of in the words of its central character in the case of the Thirteen Guests What I liked about him was that he didn t play the violin or have a wooden leg or anything of that sort He just got on with it Since 2016 all eight Detective Ben novels have been reissued by HarperCollins from the Collins Crime Club archive as a series titled Ben the tramp mystery 10 11 12 Selected works EditCrime fiction and other works Edit The Master Criminal London Brentano s 1924 The Confusing Friendship London Brentano s 1924 Little Things That Happen London Methuen 1925 Uninvited Guests London Brentano s 1925 At the Green Dragon London Harrap 1926 US title The Green Dragon New York Dial Press 1926 The Crook s Shadow London Harrap 1927 More Little Happenings London Methuen 1928 The House of Disappearance New York A L Burt 1928 Serialised as The Greystones Mystery Daily Mirror 1927 Underground New York A L Burt 1928 alternative title Mystery Underground 1932 Shadows by the Sea London Harrap 1928 The Appointed Date London 1929 The 5 18 Mystery 1929 The Person Called Z 1929 Following Footsteps 1930 The Mystery on the Moor London Collins 1930 The Z Murders London Collins 1932 Trunk Call London Collins 1932 US title The Trunk Call Mystery New York Dial Press 1932 Sometimes Life s Funny London Collins 1933 The Mystery of the Creek London Collins 1933 US title The House on the Marsh New York Dial Press 1933 Dead Man s Heath London Collins 1933 US title The Mystery of Dead Man s Heath New York Dodd Mead amp Co 1934 Old Man Mystery London Collins 1933 Fancy Dress Ball London Collins 1934 US title Death in Fancy Dress Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill Company 1939 The Windmill Mystery London Collins 1934 Sinister Inn London Collins 1934 The Golden Singer 1935 His Lady Secretary 1935 Mountain Mystery 1935 Holiday Express London Collins 1935 The Adventure of Edward 1936 Thirteen Guests London Collins 1936 Dangerous Beauty London Collins 1936 Yellow Devil 1937 Holiday at Half Mast London Collins 1937 Mystery in White 1937 The Compleat Smuggler 1938 Dark Lady 1938 End of An Author 1938 US title Death in the Inkwell Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill Company 1942 Seven Dead 1939 Exit John Horton 1939 US title Friday the 13th Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill Company 1940 Facing Death Tales Told on a Sinking Raft 1940 Aunt Sunday Sees It Through 1940 US title Aunt Sunday Takes Command Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill Company 1940 Room Number 6 1941 The Third Victim 1941 The Judge Sums Up 1942 The House of Shadows 1943 Greenmask 1944 Black Castle 1944 Rona Runs Away 1945 The Oval Table 1946 Peril in the Pyrenees 1946 The Works of Smith Minor 1947 Back To Victoria 1947 Benelogues 1948 The Llewellyn Jewel Mystery 1948 Death of a World 1948 The Adventure at Eighty 1948 Prelude To Crime 1948 The Lone House Mystery 1949 The Impossible Guest 1949 The Shadow of Thirteen 1949 The Disappearances of Uncle David 1949 Change With Me 1950 Mother Goes Gay 1950 Cause Unknown 1950 Mystery on Wheels 1951 The House Over the Tunnel 1951 Adventure For Nine 1951 The Double Crime 1953 The Mystery of the Map 1953 Money Walks 1953 Castle of Fear 1954 Bob Hits the Headlines 1954 The Caravan Adventure 1955 Detective Ben series Edit No 17 London Hodder and Stoughton 1926 The House Opposite London Collins 1931 Murderer s Trail London Collins 1931 US title Phantom Fingers New York Dial Press 1931 Ben Sees It Through London Collins 1932 Little God Ben London Collins 1935 Detective Ben London Collins 1936 Ben on the Job London Collins 1952 Number Nineteen London Collins 1952 Under the pseudonym Anthony Swift Edit Murder at a Police Station London Hale 1943 November the Ninth at Kersea London Hale 1944 Interrupted Honeymoon London Hale 1945 The Detective X Crook series Edit J J Farjeon s fictional character Detective X Crook appeared from 1925 1929 in 57 issues of Flynn s Weekly Detective Fiction 13 Red Eye 20 June 1925 The Bilton Safe 27 June 1925 The Way to Death 4 July 1925 Thomas Doubts No Longer 11 July 1925 Fisherman s Luck 18 July 1925 Where the Treasure Is 1 August 1925 The Hidden Death 8 August 1925 Nine Hours to Live 22 August 1925 Elsie Cuts Both Ways 29 August 1925 Crook s Code 19 December 1925 Percy the Pickpocket 26 December 1925 A Race for Life 2 January 1926 Seeing s Believing 9 January 1926 The Deserted Inn 23 January 1926 Death s Grim Symbol 6 February 1926 Crook Goes Back to Prison 10 April 1926 Who Killed James Fyne 17 April 1926 Caleb Comes Back 24 April 1926 The Vanished Gift 1 May 1926 The Death That Beckoned 15 May 1926 Footprints in the Snow 17 July 1926 The Shadow 24 July 1926 Cats Are Evil 14 August 1926 The Silent House 28 August 1926 The Kleptomaniac 18 September 1926 The Knife 23 October 1926 The Hotel Hold up 20 November 1926 The Silent Client 27 November 1926 Darkness 11 December 1926 It Pays To Be Honest 18 December 1926 Kidnaped 25 December 1926 Whose Hand 8 January 1927 The Datchett Diamond 29 January 1927 Vanishing Gems 5 February 1927 The Murder Club 26 February 1927 LQ585 5 March 1927 The Stolen Hand Bag 19 March 1927 Prescription 93b 26 March 1927 The Thing in the Room 7 May 1927 In the Diamond Line 28 May 1927 The New Baronet 4 June 1927 The Fourth Attempt 9 July 1927 The Absconding Treasurer 23 July 1927 The Man Who Forgot 3 September 1927 No Motive Apparent 24 September 1927 The Cleverness of Crockett 29 October 1927 August 13th 8 September 1928 The Photograph 15 September 1928 Between Calais and Dover 22 September 1928 The Bloodstained Handkerchief 6 October 1928 Wanted 13 October 1928 The Third Act 29 December 1928 The Secret of the Snow 9 February 1929 Open Warfare 16 February 1929 The Photographic Touch 9 March 1929 The Times Advertisement 30 March 1929 The Golden Idol 13 April 1929 Short story collections Edit Down the Green Stairs and Other Stories Down the Green Stairs February the Seventh It Happened in a Fog Tomatoes in Egg Cups London Todd 1943 Waiting for the Police and Other Short Stories The Other Side of the Bars Waiting for the Police Where s Mr Jones London Todd 1943 The Invisible Companion and Other Stories February the Seventh In Reverse The Invisible Companion The Room That Got Lost Supper Is Served London Todd 1943 The Twist and Other Stories The Twist The Room In Reverse London Vallancey Press 1944 The Haunted Lake and Other Stories The Haunted Lake Midnight Adventure Supper is Served Exchange is No Robbery London Polybooks 1945 Midnight Adventure and Other Stories Midnight Adventure The Vase and the Candlestick Waiting for the Police It Happened in the Fog Exchange is No Robbery London amp New York Polybooks 1946 Other short stories Edit The Tale of a Hat A Romance of the Thames Pearson s Magazine issue 172 April 1910 14 Unanswered Riddles Pearson s Magazine issue 201 September 1912 15 Romance Passes By My Best Thriller A Collection of Stories Chosen by Their Own Authors London Faber 1933 16 The Room in the Tower My Best Mystery Story A Collection of Stories Chosen by Their Own Authors London Faber 1939 17 Secrets in the Snow Stories of the Underworld London Faber 1942 18 Sergeant Dobbin Works It Out Evening Standard Detective Book Second Series London Gollancz 1951 19 Plays Edit Number 17 1925 After Dark 1926 Enchantment 1927 Philomel 1932 References Edit Search Results for England amp Wales Births 1837 2006 a b c In Edwards s Introduction to the 2014 reissue of Mystery in White A Christmas Crime Storey London British Library 1937 Lewis Melville Farjeon Benjamin Leopold 1838 1903 rev William Baker ODNB Oxford University Press 2004 Retrieved 21 November 2014 pay walled Obituary in The Independent 14 August 2006 Retrieved 21 November 2014 Publisher s biographical note in the Penguin Crime edition of the novelized No 17 IMDb Retrieved 21 November 2014 unreliable source gadetection site Retrieved 21 November 2014 As Sotto la neve Polillo Editore site Retrieved 21 November 2014 Drei Raben Verlag Retrieved 21 November 2014 HarperCollins harpercollins com Retrieved 20 August 2020 LibraryThing librarything com Retrieved 20 August 2020 WorldCat worldcat org Retrieved 20 August 2020 Mystery File 4 December 2012 Retrieved 1 April 2019 GalacticCentral philsp com Retrieved 17 January 2022 GalacticCentral philsp com Retrieved 17 January 2022 WorldCat worldcat org OCLC 1475931 Retrieved 21 January 2022 WorldCat worldcat org OCLC 21093490 Retrieved 21 January 2022 WorldCat worldcat org OCLC 13227905 Retrieved 21 January 2022 WorldCat worldcat org OCLC 30166907 Retrieved 21 January 2022 Other sources EditBordman Gerald Martin American Theatre A Chronicle of Comedy and Drama 1914 1930 Oxford University Press 1995 Krueger Christine L Encyclopedia of British Writers 19th Century Infobase Publishing 2003 External links EditJoseph Jefferson Farjeon at IMDb Joseph Jefferson Farjeon at the Internet Broadway Database Works by Joseph Jefferson Farjeon at Faded Page Canada Works by Joseph Jefferson Farjeon at LibriVox public domain audiobooks J Jefferson Farjeon at Library of Congress Authorities with 47 catalogue records Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Jefferson Farjeon amp oldid 1135589374, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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