List Of Works By Dornford Yates
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List Of Works By Dornford Yates
Dornford Yates was the pseudonym of the English novelist Cecil William Mercer (7 August 1885 – 5 March 1960), whose novels and short stories, some humorous tales (the 'Berry' books) and some serious thrillers (the 'Chandos' books), were best-sellers in the period between the First and Second World Wars. This categorization of Yates's books is based on the list that appears in his last published work, ''B-Berry and I Look Back''. All are full-length novels except where noted. Almost all of the tales in the short story collections were also published separately, often in slightly different form and with different titles in ''The Windsor Magazine'': see the corresponding book article for details. __TOC__ 'Berry' books The 'Berry' books are comic novels and short stories narrated in the first person by Boy Pleydell. They feature the family group of Berry Pleydell (Boy's cousin), Daphne Pleydell (Boy's sister and Berry's wife), Jonathan 'Jonah' Mansel (Boy's cousin) and Jill ...
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The House That Berry Built
''The House That Berry Built'' is a 1945 humorous semi-autobiographical novel by the English author Dornford Yates (Cecil William Mercer), featuring his recurring 'Berry' characters. It is a lightly fictionalised recounting of the construction of the author's house ''Cockade'' in the commune of Eaux-Bonnes, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, France. Plot Unable any longer to afford their aristocratic lifestyle in England, Berry and Co decide in 1937 to relinquish ''White Ladies'', their ancestral home in Hampshire, to the state for the use of the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs, Foreign Secretary. Nostalgic for a vanished world of social events and elegant idleness, Berry and his friends move to Pau, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, Pau in the South of France where they spend their days picnicking on the slopes of the Ossau Valley. Deciding to settle nearby, they acquire some land on the green mountainside halfway between the thermal spa of Lally and the village of Besse an ...
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Anthony Lyveden
''Anthony Lyveden'' is a 1921 adventure novel by the English author Dornford Yates (Cecil William Mercer). It was first published in monthly instalments in ''The Windsor Magazine ''The Windsor Magazine'' was a monthly illustrated publication produced by Ward Lock & Co from January 1895 to September 1939 (537 issues). The title page described it as "An Illustrated Monthly for Men and Women". It was bound as six-monthly ...''. The book was Mercer's first attempt at a full-length novel, and was succeeded by ''Valerie French'' which continued the story of the main characters. Plot Anthony Lyveden DSO, a destitute ex-officer, is forced to take a job as a footman at the Gramarye estate. The estate's owner, Colonel Winchester, becomes mad and leaves Lyveden in charge under a power of attorney. The situation drives Lyveden himself to madness. Background The author was not a happy man at the time, his father having committed suicide early in 1921, and Mercer's biographer ...
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Cost Price
In retail systems, the cost price represents the specific value that represents unit price purchased. This value is used as a key factor in determining profitability, and in some stock market theories it is used in establishing the value of stock holding. Forms Cost prices appear in several forms, such as actual cost, last cost, average cost, and net realizable value. Cost price Cost price is also known as CP. cost price is the original price of an item. The cost is the total outlay required to produce a product or carry out a service. Cost price is used in establishing profitability in the following ways: * Selling price (excluding tax) less cost results in the profit in money terms. * Profit / selling price (excluding tax) when expressed as a percentage produces ( gross profit) or GP%. * Expense / net sales yields a percentage that when used as the target margin will produce gross profit. Actual cost In calculating actual or landed cost, all expenses incurred in acquir ...
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Red In The Morning
''Red in the Morning'' is a 1946 adventure novel by the English author Dornford Yates (Cecil William Mercer), the seventh in his ' Chandos' thriller series. The events of the story immediately follow those of his 1939 novel ''Gale Warning'' in which Richard Chandos and Jonathan Mansel appear as characters. The book was published in the US under the title ''Were Death Denied''. Plot The novel is largely set in the countryside around Pau, in South-West France, although Dieppe, Chartres and Vendôme also feature. Chandos and Mansel interfere with a gang robbery at Biarritz, and are hunted down with murderous intent by the gang's leader, Daniel Gedge ("Auntie Emma", previously bested by Mansel in '' Adèle and Co.''). Characters familiar from earlier books include Jenny Chandos, John and Audrey Bagot, Carson, Bell, Rowley, Toby Rage, and the minor villain Punter. Other villains include the fallen scholar Brevet, counterfeiter Baron Horace de Parol (owner of the Château of Arx) ...
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An Eye For A Tooth
''An Eye for a Tooth'' is a 1943 adventure novel by the English author Dornford Yates (Cecil William Mercer), the sixth in his 'List of works by Dornford Yates, Chandos' thriller series. The events of the story immediately follow those of ''Blind Corner (novel), Blind Corner''. Plot On the way home in the car with the treasure from ''Blind Corner (novel), Blind Corner'', Mansel nearly runs over the corpse of a murdered man. He discovers the murderers, and seeks vengeance. Background The novel's denouement may have been suggested by Christopher Marlowe's play ''The Jew of Malta'' in which most of the characters die after being deposited by a pivoting floor into a vat of boiling oil. AJ Smithers, the author's biographer, commented, "Mercer dispensed with the oil, but the principle was the same." Critical reception The novel was well received, sold well, and had to be reprinted six times within a year of publication. References Bibliography

* 1943 British nove ...
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Woman's Journal (British Magazine)
''Woman's Journal'' was a monthly British magazine primarily targeted towards women readers, published from November 1927 to 2001.Woman's Journalhas resurrected in the UK aThe Women's Journalin 2023. The Women's Journal UK is a new online feminist magazine by women, for women - relaunched to readdreswomen's issuesat a time when there has been many steps backwards for women worldwide. Editors * Ailsa Garland (1965–1970) * Marcelle d'Argy Smith (1997–1999) * Elsa McAlonan (1999–2001) References Monthly magazines published in the United Kingdom Defunct women's magazines published in the United Kingdom Magazines established in 1927 Magazines disestablished in 2001 {{italic title ...
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She Fell Among Thieves
''She Fell Among Thieves'' is a 1935 adventure novel by the English author Dornford Yates (Cecil William Mercer), the fifth in his ' Chandos' thriller series. It was serialised in ''Woman's Journal'' (December 1934 to April 1935, illustrated by Forster). The title comes from a phrase in the Parable of the Good Samaritan. Plot The story is set in the Pyrenees. Chandos, recently widowed, and Mansel have to rescue a drugged young woman who has been held captive at Château Jezreel by the villainous elderly matriarch Vanity Fair. Background ''She Fell Among Thieves'' was written shortly after Mercer's second marriage, to Elizabeth, and was dedicated "To Jill" – the name he always used for her. Critical reception The novel was not quite as well received as the earlier 'Chandos' books had been. Although it was accepted for UK serialisation in the ''Woman's Journal'', appearing in five parts between December 1934 and April 1935, the US '' Saturday Evening Post'' declined it, ...
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Fire Below
''Fire Below'' is a 1930 adventure novel by the English author Dornford Yates (Cecil William Mercer), the fourth in his '' Chandos'' thriller series and a sequel to ''Blood Royal''. The book was published in the US under the title ''By Royal Command''. Plot Chandos and Hanbury are lured back to the fictional Principality of Riechtenburg by a forged telegram. Background In this novel, the author continued to mine ideas from Anthony Hope, specifically ''Rupert of Hentzau''. Commenting in 1958 through his character Boy Pleydell, Mercer acknowledged resemblances between his work and that of Hope, particularly mentioning ''Fire Below'' and ''Blood Royal''. Critical reception The ''Chandos'' series had made the name of Dornford Yates widely known, and ''Fire Below'' was as received as eagerly when it appeared in June 1930 as his earlier ''Chandos'' books had been. The original dustjacket included the following quotes - * Frank Swinnerton in the ''Evening News'' - "It is treme ...
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Blood Royal
A royal descent is a genealogy, genealogical Kinship and descent, line of descent from a past or present monarch. Both geneticists and genealogists have attempted to estimate the percentage of living people with royal descent. From a genetic perspective, the number of unprovable descendants must be virtually unlimited if going back enough generations, according to coalescent theory, as the possibility increases exponentially following every century back in time. In other words, the number of descendants from a monarch increases as a function of the length of time between the monarch's death and the birth of the particular descendant. As for descendants of genealogically documented royal descent, various estimated figures have been proposed. For instance, Mark Humphrys, a professor of computer science at Dublin City University in Ireland, and genealogy enthusiast, estimated that there are millions of people of provable genealogical ancestry from medieval monarchs. In genealogy ...
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Perishable Goods
Shelf life is the length of time that a commodity may be stored without becoming unfit for use, consumption, or sale. In other words, it might refer to whether a commodity should no longer be on a pantry shelf (unfit for use), or no longer on a supermarket shelf (unfit for sale, but not yet unfit for use). It applies to cosmetics, foods and beverages, medical devices, medicines, explosives, pharmaceutical drugs, chemicals, tyres, batteries, and many other perishable items. In some regions, an advisory ''best before'', mandatory ''use by'' or ''freshness date'' is required on packaged perishable foods. The concept of expiration date is related but legally distinct in some jurisdictions. Background Shelf life is the recommended maximum time for which products or fresh (harvested) produce can be stored, during which the defined quality of a specified proportion of the goods remains acceptable under expected (or specified) conditions of distribution, storage and display. A ...
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Short Stories (magazine)
''Short Stories'' was an American fiction magazine that existed between 1890 and 1959. Origin of ''Short Stories'' ''Short Stories'' began its existence as a literary periodical, carrying work by Rudyard Kipling, Émile Zola, Bret Harte, Ivan Turgenev and Anna Katharine Green.Sampson, Robert. ''Yesterday's Faces : The Solvers''. Popular Press, 1987, (pp. 1-2) The magazine advertised itself with the slogan "Twenty-Five Stories for Twenty-Five Cents". After a few years, ''Short Stories'' became dominated by reprinted fiction. The magazine was sold in 1904 and eventually purchased by Doubleday, Page and Company, which in 1910 transformed ''Short Stories'' into a "quality pulp". The magazine's new editor, Harry E. Maule (1886-1971) placed an emphasis on ''Short Stories'' carrying well-written fiction; pulp magazine historian Robert Sampson states "For ''Short Stories'', like ''Adventure'' and ''Blue Book'' to follow, rose above the expedient prose of rival magazines like ivory to ...
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