Bruce Alexander's Blind Justice is an ingenious mystery. At the center is Sir John Fielding--the blind magistrate who actually lived in 18th-century London and started the Bow Street Runners, brother to Henry Fielding--and his youthful sidekick Jeremy.5/5(3). Blind Justice [Bruce Alexander] on www.doorway.ru *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Blind Justice. · Blind Justice(Hist-Jeremy/John Fielding-London-Georgian) - VG Alexander, Bruce - 1st in series Putnam, , US Hardcover I am fascinated by books about the Bow Street Runners and early police procedures in England. Alexander has clearly done his research as his book is rich with detail of life in Georgian England.4/5(K).
Blind Justice, Paperback by Alexander, Bruce, ISBN , ISBN , Brand New, Free PP in the UK Falsely charged of theft in London, thirteen-year-old Jeremy Proctor finds his only hope in Sir John Fielding, the founder of the Bow Street Runners police force, who. Blind Justice may refer to: Blind justice (concept), a legal concept regarding the neutrality of the dispensing of justice. Blind Justice (novel), a novel by Bruce Alexander. Blind Justice (comics), is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Alexander Bruce. "Bailey, and Sir John last of all. Although no word had passed between them, I soon enough learned that the house at which we had stopped was situated on St. James Street, inside the precincts of Westminster, which was then the jurisdiction of Sir John.
Bruce Alexander is the pseudonym for a well-known author of fiction and non-fiction. The previous books in this series are Blind Justice, Murder in Grub Street (Named by The New York Times Book Review as a Notable Book in ), Watery Grave, Person or Persons Unknown (named by the Chicago Tribune as one of the best novels of ), Jack, Knave and Fool, and Death of a Colonial. Bruce Alexander is the pseudonym for a well-known author of fiction and non-fiction. The previous books in this series are Blind Justice, Murder in Grub Stree. Sir John Fielding, co-founder with his late half-brother Henry (author of Tom Jones) of the Bow Street Runners, has been dead for years, but he's just now getting his first starring role in a detective story. Here, in , the blind magistrate rescues orphaned printer's apprentice Jeremy Proctor from a trumped-up robbery charge just in time to take Jeremy along as his youthful Watson.
0コメント