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John Buchan
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L'un des 100 meilleurs thrillers de tous les temps selon The Guardian, Les 39 Marches a été adapté au cinéma par Alfred Hitchcock avant de devenir une mini-série Netflix avec Benedict Cumberbatch dans le rôle principal.
Bientôt en mini-série sur Netflix, le classique du suspense qu'Alfred Hitchcock rendit célèbreRichard Hannay, ancien ingénieur des mines, vient de rentrer à Londres après plusieurs années passées en Afrique du Sud.
Très vite, la capitale britannique l'ennuie au plus haut point. Il rencontre alors un Américain qui lui parle d'un complot qui pourrait avoir de terribles répercussions sur l'Europe entière.
Hannay accepte de le cacher dans son appartement. Mais, en rentrant chez lui, un soir, il découvre son cadavre.
Suspect pour la police, proie pour les assassins, Hannay prend la fuite. Il lui faut dès lors éclaircir cette ténébreuse affaire, et comprendre où mènent les 39 marches...
Adapté en 1935 par Alfred Hitchock,
Les 39 Marches est considéré comme le précurseur du roman d'espionnage et fait, selon l'association des Mystery Writers of America fondée en 1945, partie des 25 meilleurs suspenses de tous les temps. -
Classique parmi les classiques du roman d'espionnage, "Les Trente-neuf marches" relate les péripéties de Richard Hannay, ancien ingénieur des mines en Afrique du Sud. Revenu à Londres après avoir fait fortune, il se retrouve aux prises avec une puissante organisation criminelle nommée "La Pierre Noire". Composée d'espions allemands, celle-ci fomente un complot visant à jeter l'Europe dans la guerre. Pourchassé sur la lande écossaise, Richard Hannay se bat pour sauver sa vie et déjouer la conspiration. Il a vingt jours pour déchiffrer le code qui permettrait aux services secrets anglais de stopper l'infernale machination. Captivant de bout en bout, "Les 39 marches" inspirera en 1935 le célèbre film d'Alfred Hitchcock. L'auteur, John Buchan, a suivi parallèlement deux carrières, l'une de politicien influent (Baron Tweedsmuir d'Elsfield, membre de l'organisation semi-secrète de La Table Ronde, il fut l'éminence grise de plusieurs Premiers ministres anglais, principal artisan de la construction du Commonwealth et gouverneur général du Canada), l'autre d'écrivain, auteur d'une bonne trentaine d'oeuvres dans différents genres (biographies historiques, essais politiques, romans d'aventures et d'espionnage).
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1745. Agent de Charles Stuart qui entreprend la reconquête du trône anglais, le jeune Alastair Maclean croise les destinées de Midwinter, curieux seigneur des marges anglaises ; de la belle Claudia Norreys et de son traître et veule époux ; de Nicholas Kyd, bon vivant ambigu ; et de l'absurde et sagace Samuel Johnson, qui deviendra son fidèle ami. Dans une sauvage Angleterre magnifiée par l'hiver, Alastair achèvera, dans la douleur, une éducation sentimentale et guerrière des plus mélancoliques. Ce roman historique haut en couleurs et en rebondissements, inédit en France, rappelle le génie narratif de ce grand auteur britannique qu'est John Buchan. Il est mené tambour battant, à bride abattue et enthousiasmera ceux qui aiment que l'Histoire soit magnifiée par une belle écriture.
John Buchan (1875-1940) Écossais, homme d'état, Gouverneur général du Canada, fut d'abord responsable de l'Intelligence Service puis Ministre de l'information. Avant tout c'est un écrivain prolifique et célébré de romans d'aventures, historiques, fantastiques et d'espionnage et éditeur chez Nelson. On lui doit des livres majeurs régulièrement redécouverts qui ont enchanté la jeunesse de plusieurs générations : Salut aux coureurs d'aventures, Les 39 marches, La Centrale d'énergie, Le manteau vert -
John Buchan's "The Thirty-Nine steps" is a 1915 spy novel set in London and Scotland, during the few weeks preceding the outbreak of World War One. Made famous by Alfred Hitchcock's 1935 cinematographic adaptation, "The Thirty-Nine steps" is Buchan's most famous work. Originally an attempt at creating a "dime-novel" or a "shocker", the novel is often considered as one of the greatest adventure or spy novels of all times, and it probably invents the genre. Rediscover "The Thirty-Nine steps" with its original preface and biography in this new edition by Les Éditions de Londres.
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Frère d'armes de Richard Hannay - le héros des "Trente-neuf marches" - le jeune avocat anglais Edward Leithen se trouve confronté ici à une puissante et mystérieuse confrérie criminelle nommée "la Centrale d'énergie". Au fil de rebondissements dignes d'un film d'Alfred Hitchcock, Leithen parviendra à confondre le cerveau de l'organisation et à déjouer le complot qui menace le monde civilisé. Comme "Les Trente-neuf marches", "La Centrale d'énergie" est un roman noir captivant, prophétique et profondément original. L'auteur, John Buchan, précurseur du roman d'espionnage contemporain, a suivi parallèlement deux carrières, l'une de politicien influent (Baron Tweedsmuir d'Elsfield, membre de l'organisation semi-secrète de La Table Ronde, il fut l'éminence grise de plusieurs Premiers ministres anglais, principal artisan de la construction du Commonwealth et gouverneur général du Canada), l'autre d'écrivain, auteur d'une bonne trentaine d'oeuvres dans différents genres (biographies historiques, essais politiques, romans d'aventures et d'espionnage).
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John Buchan's "Greenmantle" is a 1916 adventure and espionage novel. In this second book of the Richard Hannay series (following The Thirty-Nine steps), Hannay is called to the Foreign Office by Sir Walter Bullivant at the beginning of the story. His mission: thwart German plans to wreak havoc in the Near East and Middle East through religious uprising. Hannay will gather his friends, and together they will travel to the Bosphorus, and fight bigger than life characters along the way. Discover Greenmantle with its original preface and biography in this new edition by Les Éditions de Londres.
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B. J. Harrison Reads The Thirty-Nine Steps
John Buchan
- Saga Egmont
- The Classic Tales with B. J. Harrison
- 25 Mars 2021
- 9788726574562
After a long stay in South Africa, Richard Hannay arrives back in London just before the outbreak of World War One. There he meets Franklin Scudder, who claims to be investigating the Black Stone - a German spy organization. Hannay gives a shelter to the man but one day he finds him dead. Now the Scotsman fears that he might be the next one on the Black Stone's list. Hannay decides to go back to his native Scotland with the notebook Scudder gave him before he was murdered.
Who is responsible for Scudder's murder? Is it the Black Stone or it is someone else? How will Hannay be involved in this story? What will he find in the mysterious notebook? Can he deal with the German spy organization on his own?
Find all the answers in John Buchan's adventure novel "The Thirty-Nine Steps" from 1915.
B. J. Harrison started his Classic Tales Podcast back in 2007, wanting to breathe new life into classic stories. He masterfully plays with a wide array of voices and accents and has since then produced over 500 audiobooks. Now in collaboration with SAGA Egmont, his engaging narration of these famous classics is available to readers everywhere.
John Buchan (1875 - 1940) was a Scottish writer, historian, lawyer and government administrator. At the age of seventeen he studied classics and mathematics at Glasgow University. With his second scholarship from Oxford Brasenose College, Buchan graduated with a Doctor of Laws degree. He admired Sir Walter Scott and was inspired by his works. John Buchan's most famous work is the spy thriller novel "The Thirty-Nine Steps", which was written during First World War. -
Please note: This audiobook has been created using AI voice.
Published in 1919, Mr. Standfast is a thriller set in the latter half of the First World War, and the third of John Buchan's books to feature Richard Hannay.
Richard Hannay is called back from serving in France to take part in a secret mission: searching for a German agent. Hannay disguises himself as a pacifist and travels through England and Scotland to track down the spy at the center of a web of German agents who are leaking information about the war plans. He hopes to infiltrate and feed misinformation back to Germany. His journey takes him from Glasgow to Skye, onwards into the Swiss Alps, and on to the Western Front.
During the course of his work he's again reunited with Peter Pienaar and John Blenkiron, who both appear in Greenmantle, as well as Sir Walter Bullivant, his Foreign Office contact from The Thirty Nine Steps.
The title of the novel comes from a character in John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress to which there are many references in the book, not least of all as a codebook which Hannay uses to decipher messages from his allies.
The book finishes with a captivating description of some of the final battles of the First World War between Britain and Germany in Eastern France. -
"The Power-House" is a spy novel written by John Buchan in 1913. It is set in London, and tells the story of a lawyer and MP who discovers an incredible plot aimed at destroying the foundations of Western democracies through an anarchist organisation called The Power-House. "The power-house" was first serialised in Blackwood's magazine and then was released as a book in 1916. Preceding the famous The Thirty-Nine steps, little known, The Power-House is a fascinating spy novel. Filled with considerations about civilization and chaos, Nietzschean references, predictions about the future, Buchan's "The Power-House" is political philosophy wrapped into a thriller inside conspiracy theory. A must-read, if only for the first encounter between the hero & narrator and the head of the Power-House. Discover The Power-House with an original preface and biography in this new edition by Les Éditions de Londres.
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Pierwsza w historii literatury wielka powie´s´c szpiegowska trzyma w napieciu kolejne pokolenie czytelników! Richard Hannay jest brytyjskim szpiegiem, który wspiera ameryka´nskiego agenta w jego tajnej misji - ma udaremni´c polityczne zabójstwo. Kiedy cialo Amerykanina zostaje znalezione w mieszkaniu Hannay, staje sie on glównym podejrzanym o zabójstwo. Mezczyzna zostaje wciagniety w skomplikowana rozgrywke miedzy niemieckimi szpiegami a brytyjskim wojskiem. Czy uda mu sie uj´s´c z tego calo?
W´sród wielu adaptacji ksiazki nalezy wyrózni´c film "The 39 Steps" z 1935 r. w rezyserii Alfreda Hitchcocka.
John Buchan (1875-1940) - szkocki polityk, który przez dlugie lata zajmowal sie równiez twórczo´scia literacka. Jako ´swiezo upieczony absolwent filologii klasycznej wyjechal do Afryki, gdzie zostal asystentem wplywowego administratora kolonialnego. Po powrocie do Londynu równolegle rozwijal kariere pisarska i polityczna. Podczas I wojny ´swiatowej rozpoczal wspólprace z Biurem Propagandy Wojennej, awansujac z czasem na jednego z glównych propagandzistów zatrudnionych przez brytyjski rzad, dzialal równiez w wywiadzie wojskowym jako autor przemówie´n dla marszalka Haiga. W zwiazku z objeciem stanowiska gubernatora generalnego Kanady otrzymal tytul barona Tweedsmuir. Zmarl nagle, na skutek udaru mózgu. Pozostawil po sobie ponad 100 utworów, a czego 30 to powie´sci sensacyjne i przygodowe. W Polsce dotad ukazala sie tylko jedna jego ksiazka - "39 stopni, czyli Tajemnica czarnego kamienia". -
Pocket Guide to Malignant Melanoma
John Buchan, Dafydd Roberts
- Wiley-Blackwell
- 15 Avril 2008
- 9780470759851
The ability to diagnose melanomas and ensure that they are properly and swiftly treated can save lives.
The latter part of this century has witnessed a rise in the incidence of this life-threatening form of skin cancer, which is linked to sun exposure. Public health campaigns have begun to raise awareness of the problem and people are now seeking medical advice about pigmented lesions. The reader is guided through the diagnosis and differential diagnosis with the aid of full color photographs, and there is a guide to interpreting the pathology report. -
B. J. Harrison Reads The Grove of Ashtaroth
John Buchan
- Saga Egmont
- The Classic Tales with B. J. Harrison
- 17 Février 2021
- 9788726574555
In this story, John Buchan explores Africa together with his friend Lawson. During their expedition, they find an astonishing place and they decide to settle there. But after a while John decides to leave Africa, while Lawson decides to stay. When Buchan returns, after some years, he finds Lawson in terrible condition and not willing to tell him why. However, Lawson's warden, Mr. Jobson, believes that the problem comes from the grove of trees in their property.
What is the reason for Lawson's poor condition? Will Buchan and Jobson find a way to cure their friend? Will they have to destroy the forest to release him from the spell he is under?
Find all the answers in John Buchan's mysterious novel "The Grove of Ashtaroth".
B. J. Harrison started his Classic Tales Podcast back in 2007, wanting to breathe new life into classic stories. He masterfully plays with a wide array of voices and accents and has since then produced over 500 audiobooks. Now in collaboration with SAGA Egmont, his engaging narration of these famous classics is available to readers everywhere.
John Buchan (1875 - 1940) was a Scottish writer, historian, lawyer and government administrator. At the age of seventeen he studied classics and mathematics at Glasgow University. With his second scholarship from Oxford Brasenose College, Buchan graduated with a Doctor of Laws degree. He admired Sir Walter Scott and was inspired by his works. John Buchan's most famous work is the spy thriller novel "The Thirty-Nine Steps", which was written during First World War. -
Double agents, espionage and romance, this historical story transports you back to the Jacobite rising in 1745 and in the midst of an attempt by Scottish highlanders to place Bonnie Prince Charlie on the English throne.
The plot follows Alastair Maclean, who has been exiled to France, and returns to join the Jacobite army as it moves towards London. Along the way he uncovers double agents, working for both the Jacobites and the British, and falls in love with an enemy's wife.
With masses of old-world descriptions and scene-setting, you will walk the roads with the Scottish rebels as they conjure up support and surge forward to London.
John Buchan, 1st Baron Tweedsmuir, was a British novelist and historian. He was also known as a Unionist politician who served as Governor General of Canada.
After a brief legal career, he started his writing, political and diplomatic careers at the same time; first serving as a private secretary to the administrator of various colonies in southern Africa. He eventually wrote propaganda for the British war effort during the First World War. He was elected Member of Parliament for the Combined Scottish Universities in 1927, but spent most of his time on his writing career, notably writing 'The Thirty-Nine Steps', which was later filmed by Alfred Hitchcock and other adventure fiction. -
"Sick Heart River" is the fifth book in the Edward Leithen series. This is Buchan's last novel, about a man who is dying, and it must reflect Buchan's own efforts to come to terms with his looming demise.
"Sick Heart River" finds Leithen now in his late fifties facing a terminal diagnosis of turberculosis. Leithen has enjoyed a dazzling career as eminent barrister, member of Parliament, Cabinet minister, and attorney-general but with only months left to live, he leaves it all behind and takes up a whole new mission into the bleak arctic wilds of Canada. The friend of a friend, Francis Galliard, has gone missing in the North, and Leithen volunteers to find him and send him back, and so to die well, far away from the irking sympathy of his friends or the coddled atmosphere of the sick-room. But the North has some surprises in store for Leithen. -
The Thirty-Nine Steps: A Quick Read edition
Quick Read, John Buchan
- Quick Read
- 16 Février 2024
- 9782385821524
Discover a new way to read classics with Quick Read.
This Quick Read edition includes both the full text and a summary for each chapter.
- Reading time of the complete text: about 4 hours
- Reading time of the summarized text: 8 minutes
"The Thirty-Nine Steps" is an adventure novel by Scottish author John Buchan, featuring Richard Hannay, an all-action hero with a miraculous knack for getting himself out of tricky situations. The novel has been adapted many times, including several films and a long-running stage play. The story follows Hannay's adventures as he tries to foil an anarchist plot to destabilize Europe, beginning with a plan to assassinate the Greek Premier, Constantine Karolides, during his forthcoming visit to London. Hannay's adventures continue in four subsequent books, two of which were set during World War I, and the other two in the postwar period. The novel is one of the earliest examples of the "man-on-the-run" thriller archetype, subsequently adopted by filmmakers as a much-used plot device. The 1935 black and white film directed by Alfred Hitchcock is regarded by many critics as the best film version. The novel has also been adapted for radio, television, and digital media. The play, based on Buchan's novel, is strongly influenced by Hitchcock's 1935 film adaptation and has won several awards. -
"The Three Hostages is the fourth of five Richard Hannay novels. The Richard Hannay novels are action/mystery/spy novels with a James bond feel. This book starts out with Richard Hannay married to Mary Lamington living in Fosse Manor. He is asked to work undercover and figure out who kidnapped three children of prominent people, while Scotland Yard investigate the abductions officially. Different friends help him solve the mystery. It's suspenseful and a fun action packed mystery!
- Summary by Kimberly Shoemaker" -
"This classic adventure novel by the author of Greenmantle and The Thirty-Nine Steps relates the first-person exploits of young David Crawfurd before the age of twenty.
As a boy growing up on the coast of Scotland, minister's son Davie and two friends were pursued with murderous intent along the cliffs one night by John Laputa, a visiting black African preacher, whom they had witnessed performing un-Christian rites round a campfire on the beach. A few years later, when his father's death forces Davie to quit college and join the tribe of wandering Scots, our hero finds himself in South Africa, assistant shopkeeper in a seemingly sleepy back-veldt store. There he re-encounters Laputa, now charismatic leader of an incipient native uprising, secretly preaching the incendiary creed of ""Africa for the Africans,"" and proclaiming himself heir to the mantle of Prester John, a legendary 15th-century Christian king of Ethiopia.
Can young Davie possibly penetrate the megalomaniac's mountain stronghold, foil the insurrection, prevent a massacre of white settlers, and make off with the rebels' war-chest of gold and diamonds? It's going to take some doing - and not a little derring-do!" -
Greenmantle is the second of five Richard Hannay novels by John Buchan, first published in 1916 by Hodder & Stoughton, London. It is one of two Hannay novels set during the First World War, the other being Mr Standfast (1919); Hannay's first and best-known adventure, The Thirty-Nine Steps (1915), is set in the period immediately before the war started. - Hannay is called in to investigate rumours of an uprising in the Muslim world, and undertakes a perilous journey through enemy territory to meet up with his friend Sandy in Constantinople. Once there, he and his friends must thwart the Germans' plans to use religion to help them win the war, climaxing at the battle of Erzurum. - Summary by Wikipedia
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Richard Hannay's boredom is soon relieved when the resourceful engineer is caught up in a web of secret codes, spies, and murder on the eve of WWI. This exciting action-adventure story was the inspiration for Alfred Hitchcock's 1939 classic film of the same name. John Buchan (1875-1940) was Governor General of Canada and a popular novelist. Although condemned by some for anti-Semitic dialog in The Thirty-Nine Steps, his character's sentiments do not represent the view of the author who was identified in Hitler's Sonderfahndungsliste (special search list) as a "Jewish sympathiser." (Summary by Adrian Praetzellis)
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"Mr Standfast" is a spy novel featuring Richard Hannay, written by John Buchan and published in 1919 by Hodder & Stoughton. Richard Hannay is recalled from the Western Front by his good friend Bullivant in order to be assigned a new mission. As always, the whole action revolves around identifying a master German spy who operates in Britain along with his agents. In order to find him out, he must adopt a disguise he truly dislikes, the one of a pacifist. He then travels to the Cotswolds as Cornelius Brand, a South African war objector, in order to penetrate a group of war-hating intellectuals. He falls in love with a young woman called Mary who is also part of the group. John Buchan is the inventor of the modern British spy novel.
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Le Prophète au manteau vert
John Buchan
Texte intégral. Cet ouvrage a fait l'objet d'un véritable travail en vue d'une édition numérique. Un travail typographique le rend facile et agréable à lire.
Dick Hannay se voit confier une mission secrète de la plus haute importance : trouver ce qui se trame en Turquie, et qui pourrait changer la face de la Grande guerre. Aidé par trois personnes : d'un américain, d'un de ses amis Dick, et d'un vieux casseur Australien, ils doivent gagner la Turquie. Dick Hannay, quant à lui, se retrouve en Allemagne... Un roman de 580 000 caractères.
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