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Inspector Pel #12

Pel and the Touch of Pitch

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Although officially removed from the case involving the kidnapping of Deputy Claude Barclay, Chief Inspector Pel diligently pursues the kidnappers on his own time

220 pages, Hardcover

First published December 31, 1988

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About the author

Mark Hebden

50 books6 followers
Mark Hebden is the pseudonymn of John Harris, who is well-known for a series of best-selling adventure stories. He wrote 35 books under his own name, 27 under the name of Mark Hebden and a further 10, mostly of a military nature, under the pseudonymn of Max Hennessy.

He was born in Yorkshire in 1916 to Mr and Mrs E J Harris who had The Stag Inn at Herringthorpe. He attended Rotherham Grammar School and after leaving there became a reporter on the Rotherham Advertiser before moving on to the Sheffield Telegraph. He also did some freelance work with a colleage in Cornwall and at various times worked as a cartoonist, travel courier and history teacher.

In World War II he served as a corporal in the RAF and was seconded to the South African Air Force. Indeed, it was said that he served two navies and two air forces during the course of the war!

He returned to the Sheffield Telegraph after the war where he as a political and comedy cartoonist and he remained with the paper until the mid-1950s.

On 31 January 1947 he married Betty Wragg at St Michael & All Angels Church, Northfield, Rotherham. The couple had a son, Max, in 1950 and a daughter, Juliet, in 1950.

He had his first novel, 'The Lonely Voyage' published in 1951 but it was in 1954 that he really came to the fore when his 1953 novel 'The Sea Shall Not Have Them' was made into a successful film. Thereafter he turned full-time to writing novels.

He wrote his first novel under the pseudonymn Mark Hebden, 'What Changed Charlie Farthing', in 1965 and his first novel featuring his French detective Chief Inspector Pel, 'Pel and the Faceless Corpse', was published in 1979. His daughter Juliet was to continue the Pel series after his death under the pen-name Juliet Hebden.

The family moved to West Wittering, near Chichester in Sussex in 1955 and he continued to write his novels from there.

He died on 7 March 1991 with his last book, 'Pel and the Sepulchre Job' being published posthumously in 1992.

The protrait accompanying this article is a cartoon self-portrait.

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Profile Image for Eugene .
777 reviews
November 13, 2023
Rather than say, “these can’t get any better,” let us posit as a compliment of equal weight, “Hebden’s Inspector Pel mysteries can’t stay this good throughout.” And it seems they can. This twelvth outing has our favorite Burgundian flic in fine form again. The decomposed corpse (identifiable, just) of a hero of the Indochina war is discovered in the woods, an apparently specific case of art forgery expands into a very large forgery operation, and a local politician is kidnapped but no ransom note nor any anonymous claim of responsibility by a terrorist group arrives. That last one gets Pel ousted from the investigation by “national security forces” who believe the backwater cops aren’t capable of cracking the case, altho’ they neither do that nor rescue the politician.
No, it’s up to Pel and his merry band of flics-in-crime-fighting to advance all the cases, find the intertwined connections between the seemingly disparate investigations and bring them all to successful conclusions.
Hebden wrote 17 of these, and after completing my now thirteenth reading, I can only say that like fine wine, they age extremely well!
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