The Bachelors of Broken Hill
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Author | Arthur Upfield |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Series | Detective Inspector Napoleon 'Bony' Bonaparte |
| Genre | Fiction |
| Publisher | Doubleday |
Publication date | 1950 |
| Publication place | Australia |
| Media type | |
| Pages | 221 pp |
| Preceded by | The Widows of Broome |
| Followed by | The New Shoe |
The Bachelors of Broken Hill (1950) is a novel by Australian writer Arthur Upfield. It is the fourteenth of the author's novels to feature his recurring character Detective Inspector Napoleon 'Bony' Bonaparte. It was originally published in USA by Doubleday in 1950 under their Crime Club imprint.[1]
Bony is called in to investigated a spate of poisonings (of a draper and metallurgist), the attempted poisoning of a bookmaker and the stabbing of a office-stenographer of the Broken Hill police.
Location
The action of the novel is set in and around Broken Hill, New South Wales.
Publishing history
Following the book's initial publication by Doubleday in 1950[1] it was subsequently published as follows:
- Invincible Press, Australia, 1953[2]
- Heinemann, UK and Australia, 1958[3]
- Pan Books, UK, 1966[2]
- Arkon Paperbacks, Australia, 1983[4]
- Eden Paperbacks, Australia, 1987[2]
- Hinkler Book Distributors, Australia, 1994[2]
- Scribner Paperback Fiction, USA, 1998[5]
- ETT Imprint, Australia, 2019[2]
and subsequent paperback, ebook and audio book editions.
The novel was also translated into German and Italian in 1957, Spanish in 1958, Slovakian in 1976 and French in 2002.[2]