Before the Saint, or James Bond? there was Bulldog Drummond. The original daredevil adventurer. Bulldog Drummond "Demobilized officer, finding peace incredibly tedious would welcome diversion. Legitimate if possible; but crime, of a comparatively humorous description, no objection. Excitement essential." This is the advertisement that Captain Hugh "Bulldog" Drummond, D.S.O., M.C., a wealthy former WWI officer of the fictional His Majesty's Royal Loamshire Regiment, places in a newspaper. After the First World War, rife with daring escapades, peacetime is too tame for Bulldog and his friends so he decides to spend his new-found leisure time as a private detective of sorts. His first reply comes from a beautiful young woman, who sends him racing off to investigate what at first looks like blackmail but turns out to be far more complicated and dangerous. The rescue of a kidnapped millionaire, found with his thumbs horribly mangled, leads Drummond to the discovery of a political conspiracy of awesome scope and villainy, masterminded by the ruthless Carl Peterson. The Black Gang The second book of the quadrilogy sees 'Bulldog' Drummond tackle bribery and blackmail that is undermining England's democracy, so he forms the Black Gang, to foil the perpetrators. They set a trap to lure the criminal mastermind behind these subversive attacks to England. All is going to plan until Bulldog Drummond accepts an invitation to tea at the Ritz with a charming American clergyman and his dowdy daughter. The Third Round The death of Professor Goodman is officially recorded as a tragic accident, but at the inquest, no mention is made of his sensational discovery ? a new formula for manufacturing flawless diamonds at low cost, which strikes 'Bulldog' Drummond as rather strange. His suspicions are further aroused when he spots a member of the Metropolitan Diamond Syndicate at the inquest. He soon untangles a sinister plot of greed and murder, which brings him face to face with his archenemy. The Final Count Robin Gaunt's new invention was terrifyingly, unimaginably powerful: a weapon of chemical warfare which caused "universal, instantaneous death". When Gaunt disappeared from his rooms, leaving no trace but a faint bitter smell, the police suspected that he had sold out to the other side. But Bulldog Drummond believes otherwise. Convinced of Gaunt's innocence, he can think of only one man ruthless enough to use the invention to hold the world to ransom, and he is determined to track him down before it is too late. Then he receives an invitation to a lavish dinner-dance aboard an airship that is to mark the beginning of his final battle with his arch foe.
Sapper was the pseudonym of Herman Cyril McNeile, whose father was Malcolm McNeile, a Captain in the Royal Navy and, at who was at the time, governor of the naval prison at Bodmin, the town where Herman was born. McNeile was educated at Cheltenham College and the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich and was commissioned into the Royal Engineers (the Sappers) in 1907. He went to France in 1914 when World War I broke out and he saw action at both the First and the Second Battle of Ypres where he displayed considerable bravery, was awarded the Military Cross and was mentioned in dispatches. His first known published work was a series of short war stories based on his own experiences, and published under the name 'Sapper' in the Daily Mail and in the magazine The War Illustrated. These stories were immediately successful and later sold over 200,000 copies within a year when subsequently republished in book-form. He began the series for which he now best remembered, that of Hugh 'Bulldog' Drummond in 1920 and thereafter he wrote 10 novels featuring his eponymous hero. The public took to Drummond and McNeile had great financial success. He died on 14 August 1937 at his home in Pulborough, West Sussex. His good friend and collaborator Gerard Fairlie, continued the Drummond series after McNeile's death with seven further books.
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