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Department of Dead Ends book cover
Department of Dead Ends
1954
First Published
3.78
Average Rating
250
Number of Pages
Highly entertaining "inverted" mystery stories (the reader knows who committed the crime, but the interest lies in how the detective solves the case) that appeared as a series in a British magazine in the 1930's. Vickers posits a (fictional) branch of Scotland Yard, the "Department of Dead Ends," a repository for the unsolved cases of the yard. It's up to the brilliant detectives of this branch to solve these seemingly impenetrable mysteries. Vicker's characters are full fleshed and his plots ingenious.
Avg Rating
3.78
Number of Ratings
50
5 STARS
22%
4 STARS
42%
3 STARS
28%
2 STARS
8%
1 STARS
0%
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Author

Roy Vickers
Roy Vickers
Author · 5 books

William Edward Vickers (1889 - 1965) was an English mystery writer better known under his pen name Roy Vickers, but he also wrote under the pseudonyms Roy C. Vickers, David Durham, Sefton Kyle, and John Spencer. He is now remembered mostly for his attribution to Scotland Yard of a Department of Dead Ends, specialising in solving old, sometimes long-forgotten cases, mostly by chance encounters of odd bits of strange and apparently disconnected evidence. He was educated at Charterhouse School, and left Brasenose College, Oxford, without a degree. For some time he studied law at the Middle Temple, but never practised. He married Mary Van Rossem and they had one son. He worked as a journalist, court reporter, magazine editor and wrote a large number of non-fiction articles which he sold in the hundreds to newspapers and magazines. Between November 1913 and February 1917, 20 short stories by Vickers were published in the 'Novel Magazine', which he edited. And in 1914 he published his first book, a biography of Field Marshal Frederick, Earl Roberts entitled 'Lord Roberts The Story of His Life'. In September 1934, 'The Rubber Trumpet', the first of 37 stories featuring the fictitious Department of Dead Ends, appeared in Pearson's Magazine. This was subsequently collected with other stories in 'The Department of Dead Ends' (1949). Another series of his books featured his heroine Felicity Dove. In 1960 he edited the Crime Writers' Association's anthology of short stories 'Some Like Them Dead'. The Manchester Evening News called one of his collections, 'one of the half-dozen successful books of detective short stories published since the days of Sherlock Holmes'. Some of his work has been adapted for film such as 'Girl in the News' (1940), 'Violent Moment' (1959) and there were three of his stories used as episodes in television's 'Alfred Hitchcock Presents' series (Season 3: 1957-58). He died in Hampstead in 1965. Note: He was born in the first quarter of 1889 and he died in the third quarter of 1965 so the dates of death above reflect that no definite date is known for either event.

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