Dr. Gideon Fell Series by John Dickson Carr

3.78 · 50 ratings
  • Hag's Nook (Dr. Gideon Fell #1)
    #1

    Hag's Nook (Dr. Gideon Fell #1)

    John Dickson Carr

    Rated: 3.64 of 5 stars
    · 14 ratings · published 1932

    In his detecting debut, larger than life lexicographer Dr. Gideon Fell is entertaining young American college graduate Tad Rampole at Yew Cottage, Fell's charming home in the English countryside. Within sight of his study window is the ruin of Chatterham Prison, perched high on a precipice known as Hag's Nook. The prison's land belongs to the Starberth family—whose eldest sons must each spend an hour in the prison's eerie "Governor's Room" to inherit the family fortune... more

  • The Hollow Man (Dr. Gideon Fell #6)
    #6

    The Hollow Man (Dr. Gideon Fell #6)

    John Dickson Carr

    Rated: 3.88 of 5 stars
    · 16 ratings · published 1935

    Professor Charles Grimaud was explaining to some friends the natural causes behind an ancient superstition about men leaving their coffins when a stranger entered and challenged Grimaud's skepticism. The stranger asserted that he had risen from his own coffin and that four walls meant nothing to him. He added, 'My brother can do more... he wants your life and will call on you!' The brother came during a snowstorm, walked through the locked front door, shot Grimaud and vanished... more

  • The Problem of the Wire Cage: A Gideon Fell Mystery (Dr. Gideon Fell #11)
    #11

    The Problem of the Wire Cage: A Gideon Fell Mystery (Dr. Gideon Fell #11)

    John Dickson Carr

    Rated: 3.67 of 5 stars
    · 6 ratings · published 1939

    Death and tennis meet in one of impossible crime master John Dickson Carr’s most memorable cases. John Dickson Carr is famous for his puzzling “impossible crime” plots, in which corpses are discovered in scenarios that seem to lack any logical explanation, concealing clues as to how the murder was committed and how the body arrived in its current setting... more

  • Death Turns the Tables (Dr. Gideon Fell #14)
    #14

    Death Turns the Tables (Dr. Gideon Fell #14)

    John Dickson Carr

    Rated: 3.83 of 5 stars
    · 6 ratings · published 1941

    Judge Horace Ireton didn't care about the letter of the law. He was interested in administering absolute, impartial justice as he saw it. To some, his methods of meting out justice made him seem hardly human, for they were coldly calculated - the same type of "cat and mouse" technique that he used in his chess games with Dr. Gideon Fell, the elephantine detective... more

  • He Who Whispers (Dr. Gideon Fell #16)
    #16

    He Who Whispers (Dr. Gideon Fell #16)

    John Dickson Carr

    Rated: 3.88 of 5 stars
    · 8 ratings · published 1946

    A Dr Gideon Fell mystery and classic of the locked-room genre Outside the little French city of Chartres, industrialist Howard Brookes is found dying on the parapet of an old stone tower. Evidence shows that it was impossible for anyone to have entered at the time of the murder, however someone must have, for the victim was discovered stabbed in the back... more

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