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The Mysteries of Professor Van Dusen (eBook)

The Thinking Machine - Detective Stories
Autor: Jacques Futrelle
CHF 1.95
ISBN: 978-80-282-9853-1
Einband: Adobe Digital Editions
Verfügbarkeit: Download, sofort verfügbar (Link per E-Mail)
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This carefully crafted ebook: "49 Tales of The Thinking Machine (49 detective stories featuring Professor Augustus S. F. X. Van Dusen, also known as "The Thinking Machine")" is formatted for your eReader with a functional and detailed table of contents. Professor Van Dusen . is a fictional character in a series of detective short stories and two novels by Jacques Futrelle. Some of the short stories were originally published in The Saturday Evening Post and the Boston American. In the stories Professor Van Dusen solves a variety of different mysteries together with his friend Hutchinson Hatch, reporter of a fictional newspaper called "The Daily New Yorker". The professor is known as the "Thinking Machine", solving problems by the remorseless application of logic. His catchphrases include, "Two and two always equal four," "Nothing is impossible", and "All things that start must go somewhere."

Autor Futrelle, Jacques
Verlag Copycat
Einband Adobe Digital Editions
Erscheinungsjahr 2023
Ausgabekennzeichen Englisch

Über den Autor Jacques Futrelle

Jacques Heath Futrelle, born on April 9, 1875, in Pike County, Georgia, was an American journalist and mystery writer famed for his unique and intellectual detective stories, especially those featuring the cerebral detective character known as 'The Thinking Machine'. Before turning to fiction, Futrelle worked as a journalist and theatrical writer, but he eventually became engrossed in the world of detective fiction. His work is typified by the use of intricate, logic-based puzzles, which his hero, Professor Augustus S. F. X. Van Dusen (The Thinking Machine), would unravel in a methodical and scientific manner. Futrelle's legacy as an author is most famously encapsulated in his collection '49 Tales of The Thinking Machine', which showcases his skill in combining complex plots with a rational approach to detective work (Futrelle, 1918). Although Futrelle's literary career was cut short when he perished in the tragic sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912, his contributions to the genre of detective fiction continue to be celebrated for their ingenuity and influence on later detective narratives. His writing style involved an emphasis on the powers of deductive reasoning and logic, aligning with the rising fascination with science and rationality of the early twentieth-century literati. Despite the brevity of his career, Jacques Futrelle remains a distinguished figure in the annals of crime and mystery literature.

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