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  1. 15 de mar. de 2024 · Ngaio Marsh’s Non-Fiction Books. View on Amazon. Ngaio Marsh was famous for her fiction, but she also has several non-fiction works to explore, including her famous 1965 autobiography, Black Beech and Honeydew. Here are Marsh’s non-fiction works in the order they were published. New Zealand (1942)

  2. The final list of the 2024 Ngaio Marsh Awards entries is at at ... Updates - Week Ending 22nd March. A week in which rather a lot of New Zealand (#yeahnoir) based crime fiction arrived in these parts. I'm putting together a list of the 2024 Ngaio Marsh Awards entries at ...

  3. Joan Stevens, “Ngaio Marsh: Artist in Crime”, New Zealand Listener, 8 May 1972, 13. Terry Sturm, “Popular Fiction”; in (ed.) Sturm, The Oxford History of New Zealand Literature in English (Auckland: Oxford University Press, 1991), 510-514.

  4. Preceded by. Death at the Bar. Followed by. Death and the Dancing Footman. Surfeit of Lampreys is a detective novel by Ngaio Marsh; it is the tenth novel to feature Roderick Alleyn, and was first published in 1941. The novel was published as Death of a Peer in the United States. The plot concerns the murder of a British peer, [1] a theme to ...

  5. Dame Ngaio Marsh, one of New Zealand's most remarkable and charismatic women, was world-renowned as a leading crime fiction writer and as an eminent Shakespearian producer. From her first book in 1934 to her final volume just before her death in 1982, Ngaio Marsh's work has remained legendary, consistently compared to that of Agatha Christie , Margery Allingham and Dorothy L Sayers .

  6. 1 de sept. de 2008 · Ngaio Marsh is one of the big four ‘Queens of Crime,’ along with Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers and Margery Allingham. Although I have read most of Christie’s and Sayers work, I still have to explore much of Marsh and Allingham’s and, as I am planning to start reading Ngaio Marsh’s series next year, I thought it would be nice to read her biography.

  7. 13 de oct. de 2020 · 1. She was a Queen of Crime. During the Golden Age of British detective fiction — circa the 1920s and ’30s — Dame Ngaio Marsh was dubbed one of the ‘Queens of Crime,’ along with Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, and Margery Allingham. The American crime writer and literary critic, herself a maven of hardboiled noir novels, called ...