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A ghost on an aged estate. Several mysterious deaths. A creature stalking the wilds of Dartmoor. Sounds like the recipe for a perfect mystery, and they are all to be found within the pages of Paul Halter's The Demon of Dartmoor. Halter, a French author still working today, Halter has been described as the successor to John Dickson Carr as the master of the impossible crime mystery, and a champion of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction. Translated into English, Halter's books are now readily available around the world, and today we dive into the work of this modern-day master.
By Nick CardilloA ghost on an aged estate. Several mysterious deaths. A creature stalking the wilds of Dartmoor. Sounds like the recipe for a perfect mystery, and they are all to be found within the pages of Paul Halter's The Demon of Dartmoor. Halter, a French author still working today, Halter has been described as the successor to John Dickson Carr as the master of the impossible crime mystery, and a champion of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction. Translated into English, Halter's books are now readily available around the world, and today we dive into the work of this modern-day master.