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  1. Refresh and try again. * Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more books, click here . Nicholas Blake has 80 books on Goodreads with 22259 ratings. Nicholas Blake’s most popular book is The Beast Must Die (Nigel Strangeways, #4).

  2. Nicholas Blake was a pseudonym of Cecil Day-Lewis (or Day Lewis) (27 April 1904 – 22 May 1972). Day-Lewis was an English poet born in Ballintubber, County Laois, ... The critic and award-winning mystery writer H.R.F. Keating included in 1987 The Beast Must Die among the 100 best crime and mystery books ever published.

  3. Frank Cairnes, a popular detective writer who now ... The Nicholas Blake Treasury, Volume 1. by Nicholas Blake. 3.10 · 10 Ratings · 3 Reviews · published 1992 · 5 editions. No ISBN Contains the three Nigel Strangeways storie ...

  4. But he was by then earning his living mainly from his writings, having had some poetry published in the late 1920s and early 1930s, and then in 1935 beginning his career as a thriller writer under the pseudonym of Nicholas Blake with 'A Question of Proof', which featured his amateur sleuth Nigel Strangeways, reputedly modelled on W H Auden.

  5. Nigel Strangeways. Nigel Strangeways is a fictional British private detective created by Cecil Day-Lewis, writing under the pen name of Nicholas Blake. He was one of the prominent detectives of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction, appearing in sixteen novels between 1935 and 1966. He also features in a couple of short stories.

  6. But he was by then earning his living mainly from his writings, having had some poetry published in the late 1920s and early 1930s, and then in 1935 beginning his career as a thriller writer under the pseudonym of Nicholas Blake with 'A Question of Proof', which featured his amateur sleuth Nigel Strangeways, reputedly modelled on W H Auden.

  7. But he was by then earning his living mainly from his writings, having had some poetry published in the late 1920s and early 1930s, and then in 1935 beginning his career as a thriller writer under the pseudonym of Nicholas Blake with 'A Question of Proof', which featured his amateur sleuth Nigel Strangeways, reputedly modelled on W H Auden.