Kyril Bonfiglioli (1928 – 1985) was an art dealer, accomplished fencer, a fair shot with most weapons, and a serial marrier of beautiful women. He claimed to be “abstemious in all things except drink, food, tobacco, and talking,” and “loved and respected by all who knew him slightly.”
The Great Mortdecai Moustache Mystery: The Fourth Charlie Mortdecai Novel
eBook
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ISBN-13:
9781468312935
- Publisher: The Overlook Press
- Publication date: 11/10/2015
- Sold by: Barnes & Noble
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 176
- Sales rank: 242,308
- File size: 1 MB
Available on NOOK devices and apps
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"You couldn't snuggle under the duvet with anything more disreputable and delightful" —Stephen Fry
'She was a Fellow and Tutor of Scone College and the world must learn that Fellows and Tutors of Scone College shall not be done to death with impunity.'
The Hon. Charlie Mortdecai, the inspiration for the character in the film Mortdecai, starring Johnny Depp, is invited to Oxford to investigate the cruel and most definitely unusual death of a don who collided with an omnibus. Though her death appears accidental, one or two things don't add up - such as two pairs of thugs who'd been following her just before her death. With more spies than you could shoe horn into a stretch limo and the solving of the odd murder along the way, The Great Mortdecai Moustache Mystery is a criminally comic delight.
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In the 1970s, Bonfiglioli (1928–1985) made a splash with Don’t Point That Thing at Me and two other humorous mysteries featuring Charlie Mortdecai, a former art dealer who’s often on the wrong side of the law. Completed by British humorist Brown (Hello Goodbye Hello) and originally published in 1996, this first U.S. edition of the witty fourth and final Charlie Mortdecai mystery centers on the death of Bronwen Fellworthy—a fellow and tutor at Scone College, Oxford, Mortdecai’s alma mater—who perished instantly when her motorcar collided with an omnibus. Mortdecai, who considers Fellworthy “perhaps the only wholly unacceptable woman I have encountered in a long and varied experience,” gets involved in the investigation thanks to, among others, Det. Chief Insp. Albert H. Sermon, who makes him a “Special Detective Inspector with Detached Duties.” Fans of Jonathan Gash’s Lovejoy mysteries (The Judas Pair, etc.) will find a lot to like. (Nov.)
and to deliver a stolen Goya he has concealed in the headliner of his Rolls
Royce Silver Ghost. The plot takes him to America (where is he much bemused by the locals, and they by him) and back again, ending in a most intriguing predicament. Wry and dry, picaresque and profane, a book like this can be so hard to describe that efforts to do so—invoking some or all of P. G. Wodehouse,
Kingsley Amis, Vladimir Nabokov, even Hunter S. Thompson and John Kennedy
Toole—give the impression that it's a Frankenstein's monster. Not true.
Bonfiglioli's Mortdecai is a true original, and there's nothing quite so hard to describe as that
(or at least any film cleared for general release) could be…The novels are extremely funny, first of all. They deal, like Wodehouse, in sentence-by-sentence sparkle, in gestures of grand insouciance.