THE VIADUCT MURDER - Ronald Knox read by various - Mystery Crime Fiction - Audiobook
A badly battered corpse is found on the golf links. The first verdict was suicide; but four leisurely gentlemen staying at the country club thought differently, and so did the police. Several times the mystery seems to be solved conclusively; the evidence seems to be complete; but there is a flaw in the logic and the search begins anew. The final explanation proves for the detectives, as for all people, that the obvious things are the best concealed.
The complications and mystery of the narrative will please one class of readers. but another group will be more delighted with the cultured argumentations of the four amateur detectives. In directing their talk, Father Knox shows an amazing of perspicacity
The Viaduct Murder by Ronald Knox (1888 - 1957)
Genre(s): Crime & Mystery Fiction
Read by: ToddHW, Shade13, Paul Williams Jr, purplepudding, James R. Hedrick, Yoganandh T, James Hutchisson, tjfria, Nigel Kerr, Sagar Patke, Stat51
Chapters:
00:00:00 - 01 - The Paston Oatvile Dormy-House
00:23:14 - 02 - In the Rough
00:38:32 - 03 - Piecing it Together
00:53:44 - 04 - Endless Clues
01:08:31 - 05 - On the Railway
01:21:42 - 06 - The Movements of Mr. Davenant
01:37:24 - 07 - Carmichael's Account of it
01:50:28 - 08 - The Inquest, and a Fresh Clue
02:03:14 - 09 - The Animated Picture
02:17:17 - 10 - In Which a Book is More Communicative Then a Lady
02:34:02 - 11 - A Funeral and a Vigil
02:50:07 - 12 - A Search with Piano Accompaniment
03:07:50 - 13 - The Man in the Passage
03:24:26 - 14 - A Chase, Ending with a Surprise
03:39:34 - 15 - Gordon Takes the Opportunity to Philosophize
03:54:55 - 16 - Reeves Promises to do His Best
04:08:12 - 17 - By Which Train?
04:21:11 - 18 - The Holmes Method
04:36:15 - 19 - Mordaunt Reeves Talks to Himself
04:54:26 - 20 - Proof at Last
05:08:57 - 21 - The Test
05:22:21 - 22 - In the Fog
05:32:25 - 23 - Marryatt Breaks the Pledge
05:44:58 - 24 - Gordon Offers the Consolation of Philosophy
06:01:12 - 25 - The Dull Facts