Raffles  The Amateur Cracksman, E.W. Hornung
Raffles  The Amateur Cracksman, E.W. Hornung
2 Rating(s)
List: $11.99 | Sale: $8.40
Club: $5.99

Raffles - The Amateur Cracksman

Author: E.W. Hornung

Narrator: David Rintoul

Unabridged: 5 hr 3 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 01/04/2014

Categories: Fiction, Crime


Synopsis

If you walk down London’s Piccadilly, you come across an elegant Georgian building set back from the constant stream of traffic. This is The Albany, an imposing warren of “bachelor” apartments which has been home to a string of celebrities for over two centuries, from Lord Byron to Terence Stamp
But The Albany was also the address for one of the greatest fictional creations of late 19th-century crime writing, AJ Raffles. The author, E.W. Hornung was not as well known as his brother-in-law, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, yet in many ways, Hornung was a better writer and Raffles a cleverer star then even Sherlock himself.

For Raffles operates on the wrong side of the law, yet remains a magnetic and sympathetic personality. On the surface, Raffles is a gentleman cricketer straight out of the pages of “Boy’s Own” – yet from the very first story, “The Ides of March”, we discover that this is all a pretence: behind the mask is a bankrupt who commits a series of sensational crimes to finance his champagne and cigars lifestyle – and his flat in The Albany.What separates Raffles from Holmes is that he’s more recognizably human and fallible – he doesn’t always lift the loot, and bad luck throws him a few curve balls. Whether the setting is an English country house or the Australian outback, Raffles’s diamond-hard determination, his lightning ingenuity and profound knowledge of human nature are always on display, And though he could have been hanged for any one of these crimes, Raffles remains a man you wouldn’t mind sharing a cocktail or two with during a night out on the town.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Maureen on December 27, 2012

the idea of raffles, the gentleman thief, obverse of the legendary sherlock holmes, gentleman detective (the creation of hornung's esteemed brother-in-law arthur conan doyle), thrills me. and i can't say i don't normally adore the idea of working outside the law to balance the scales of justice -- i......more

Goodreads review by Wealhtheow on February 06, 2017

Raffles and Bunny are two young gentlemen with large debts and no desire to work for a living. They turn to crime, specifically burglary, to continue to live their lives of idle luxury. The stories are clearly inspired by and partially parodies of the Sherlock Holmes stories. Raffles is cold, logica......more

Goodreads review by Tiziana on May 24, 2024

I read this book about 3 years ago and have reread the stories in it over the last 2 days. I have always been fascinated by stories of gentleman thieves, but except for having seen an old black and white film with David Niven and Olivia De Havilland from 1939, I had never heard of Raffle. I found this......more

Goodreads review by Eddie on August 09, 2021

This has never come across my radar before, but decided to give it a go. Horning was directly inspired by the success of his bother-in-law Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories, and Raffles neatly inverts the Holmes formula - Raffles is a cricket-playing gentleman jewel thief and his sidekick......more

Goodreads review by Elizabeth (Alaska) on May 06, 2022

This is a fun collection of inter-connected short stories. I want to emphasize the inter-connected part because they come almost-but-not-quite to the level of a novel rather than feeling like short stories. One story leads to another. Otto Penzler's introduction to this edition says: It has been spe......more