The Case with Nine Solutions

1928 novel From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Case with Nine Solutions is a 1928 detective novel by the British writer Alfred Walter Stewart, published under his pseudonym J.J. Connington.[1] It is the forth in his series of novels featuring the Golden Age Detective Chief Constable Sir Clinton Driffield. It was published in London by Gollancz and the following year in Boston by Little, Brown and Company.[2]

LanguageEnglish
GenreDetective
Quick facts Author, Language ...
The Case with Nine Solutions
American first edition cover
AuthorJ.J. Connington
LanguageEnglish
SeriesSir Clinton Driffield
GenreDetective
PublisherGollancz
Publication date
1928
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint
Preceded byMystery at Lynden Sands 
Followed byNemesis at Raynham Parva 
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Synopsis

Doctor Ringwood, acting as a locum in a small town while the GP is away, is called out one very foggy evening to attend to an urgent case. By accident goes to the house next door and finds a dying man who has clearly been shot. He goes next door to telephone for the police, and examines the patient he had been called out to tend to who is suffering from scarlet fever. He returns to the other house to stand guard until Sir Clinton Driffield and his colleague Inspector Flamborough arrive. During their time at the crime scene, a second murder takes place next door. Two further deaths occur before the case is solved, as Driffield works through the nine possible solutions of the killings.

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