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Poison for Teacher

Nancy Spain

'Her detective novels are hilarious - less about detecting than delighting with absurd farce and a wonderful turn of phrase . . . Nancy Spain was bold she was brave she was funny she was feisty' SANDI TOKSVIG

Miriam Birdseye ex-revue star and now professional sleuth is intrigued when the headmistress of Radcliff Hall arrives at her Baker Street detective agency. A series of bizarre stunts that at first seemed like pranks have taken a sinister turn and since Mis Lipscoomb found her gym rope half sawn through she's begun to fear not only for her school but for her life.

This is how Miriam and her friend Russian ballerina Natasha Nevkorina find themselves on board the train to a Sussex girls' school in the unlikely guise of teachers. Before long the detective duo uncovers a blackmail plot infidelity and a dizzying array of school schisms. And then a teacher is poisoned during the school play; can they discover the culprit before the body count rises?

From the pen of Nancy Spain for whom farce and humour are a lot more fun than a conventional detective novel the result is a deliciously wild ride.

'An either intense or sombre approach to crime is to Miss Spain foreign: in her world an inspired craziness rules . . . Her wit her zest her outrageousness and the colloquial stylishness of her writing are quite her own'
Elizabeth Bowen

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  • Classification : Thriller, Crime & Mystery
  • Pub Date : APR 1, 2021
  • Imprint : Virago
  • Page Extent : 432
  • Binding : PB
  • ISBN : 9780349013985
  • Price : INR 950
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Nancy Spain

Nancy Spain was a prominent novelist broadcaster and journalist. She was a columnist for the Daily Express and She magazine in the 1950s and 1960s. She also appeared on many radio broadcasts particularly on Woman's Hour and later as a panellist on the television programmes What's My Line? and Juke Box Jury. Born in Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 1917 she was the great-niece of the legendary Mrs Beeton. During the second world war she worked as a driver and served in the WRNS and after the war she published several detective novels set at a girls' school. Always controversial her column-writing caused the Daily Express to be sued - twice - by Evelyn Waugh.

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