- product-details.type.audio
- 2020
- 50 min
- SAGA Egmont
product-details.title-label
B. J. Harrison Reads The Secret Garden
product-details.description-label
Aristide Valentin holds a dinner party in his secret garden, which only has one main entrance. Many people are invited. Julius K. Brayne, one of Valentin's rivals, is of the party as well. Everything goes as planned until one group of guests finds a beheaded corpse and the dinner turns into an investigation. Many questions begin to arise: How could someone be killed in a closed back garden without anyone noticing? Who is the victim? Who is the murderer? Where is the head? Find out the answers in "The Secret Garden".
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product-details.publisher-label:
product-details.author-label:
product-details.title-label:
B. J. Harrison Reads The Secret Garden
product-details.read-by-label:
product-details.language-label:
EN
product-details.isbn-audio-label:
9788726574128
product-details.publication-date-label:
26 de novembro de 2020
product-details.keywords-label:
product-details.duration-label
50 min
product-details.product-type-label
AUDIO
product-details.serie-label:
product-details.explicit-label:
product-details.no-label
product-details.radioplay-label:
product-details.no-label
product-details.unabridged-label:
product-details.yes-label
product-details.about-author:
Gilbert Keith Chesterton was an English writer who lived in the period 1874-1936. He was a prolific journalist and wrote over 4,000 newspaper essays. He even had his own newspaper "G.K.'s Weekly" which he edited himself. He was also a very successful critic with a wide variety of interests, including history, philosophy, theology and economics. This led him to leave an enormous literary legacy with a wide diversity of topics. He wrote novels, short stories, mysteries and poems. His writing was often marked by a sense of humor, which he employed while discussing serious topics, and because of that he was nicknamed "the prince of paradox". Some of his best known works are "The Everlasting Man", "The Napoleon of Notting Hill" and "Charles Dickens: A Critical Study".