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The Mystery of Tunnel 51

Book 1 in Wallace of the Secret Service Series

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The Mystery of Tunnel 51

By: Alexander Wilson
Narrated by: David Timson
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Chief of the Intelligence Department Sir Leonard Wallace - bearing always the hall mark of coolness and wit - is up to his earlobes in trouble. Summoned by the Viceroy of India, he makes a rapid flight to India to investigate the mysterious death of British officer Major Elliot and the theft of some very important dispatches.©1928 The Alexander Wilson Estate (P)2015 W.F. Howes Ltd Crime Fiction Fiction Historical Fiction Mystery Traditional Detectives Detective Crime Suspense
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This book has to be seen in its context; this is a 1920's English adventure story. If you are looking for gritty realism, then you are in the wrong place. It is brimming with stiff upper lip, dastardly villains, delicate but plucky ladies and a suave, assured hero. It is a passable adventure to while away a long drive, although one can see why the series has not passed the test of time in the same way as John Buchan's Richard Hannay novels.

I started this intrigued by some reviews of its racism and portrayal of Indian characters. I feel this is a very unreasonable imposition of modern values on quite a gentle period piece. Take that level of censorship and we would wipe out pretty much every work of fiction before 1950, and quite a lot since.

All in all, a light, frothy listen, but not a series I will return to.

Passable adventure story

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I did struggle to finish this because the main character can't seem to not fall into every trap. Can't fault the narrator, David Timson, who made the best of the story possible.

Exasperating at times

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Excellent stiff upper lip english yarn, dastardly johnny foreigner against the noble and fair minded good sorts from the english military and upper class. Absolutely politically incorrect on every level,. Yet vey enjoyable,

BOYS OWN YARN!

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It is wonderful to have access to these stories from the Golden Age of Crime Fiction - a wonderful ripping yarn!!!

Golden Age

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I greatly enjoy detective yarns from the so-called Golden Age of crime writing, but this was decidedly bronze medal stuff. The premise was fine, and when the author was describing the Indian countryside (clearly taken from personal experience) that too also held up. However, the pace was even uneven and character stereotypes were embarrassing shallow. We had to suffer cringing natives, who often gave in after little more than a bluff or sharp stare from an pukka Englishman, plus a hero-worshipping No2, and then Wallace's batman, who came across like like Long John Silver's idiot brother. "Swab me decks!" has never been used so often and with so little justification. Even allowing for the fact that what is acceptable in conversation has changed in the last couple of generation, too much of the dialogue here was simply excruciating. I'd recommend fast-forwarding through any passage involving Wallace's family. I had had great hopes for the series, but no. It was awful.

Dreadful tosh

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