Wednesday, April 7, 2021

Recently Published: A Paperbound Set of Mysteries That Delights Fans of Supernatural Detection

 Recently Published: A Paperbound Set of Mysteries That Delights Fans of Supernatural Detection


TiLu Press recently updated the above eBook into a paperbound edition. It's a whopping volume of detective stories that focuses on supernatural detectives that go about solving crimes, debunking them with science while having various adventures in interesting locales, (aka as storylines from the occult detection genre). In one volume we have a paperback edition that features two complete books (an anthology of stories and a novel) and an additional short story. There is also an interesting introduction by Tim Prasil, a university professor who's a specialist and author of books that feature occult detectives. Check out the new paperbound edition by clicking on the cover or here. ~~ND

Further description of this work:  

This Book Features:* Three Complete Works in One Volume* Over 400 Pages of Material* Two Books and One Short Story* A Collection of Detective Mystery Stories* Supernatural Themes Debunked by Detection* Annotated and Differentiated Front Matter*About the Authors Section Contains: History of each Author's Contribution to the Mystery Genre* This edition by TiLu Press also includes Introductions by the Publisher and an Introduction by Occult Detective Fiction Expert and University Professor, Tim Prasil* 

In this quick-paced, easy-to-read collection of three works by L. T. Meade and Robert Eustace, we have detective mystery stories with supernatural themes (ghosts, haunted rooms, fortune tellers) debunked by masterful detectives such as John Bell and Mr. Head. As well as Diana Marburg, who uses her supernatural (psychic) abilities in detection. This work includes two complete books: A Master of Mysteries, and The Brotherhood of Seven Kings, as well as the Short Story, The Dead Hand. Over 400 pages of fun, page-turning mysteries, the book also features annotated material, never before published outside of the 2013 edition. Altogether, this should be a fun read for fans of mystery stories that feature occult detectives."Whether read for their socio-political implications, their creative freshness, or simply for the thrill of the mysteries, these works by Meade and Eustace are sure to continue to intrigue and delight readers"--Tim Prasil from the Introduction.


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