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Baby Ganesh Detective Agency series Vaseem Khan [ 3 ] (born 1973) is a British writer, author of the Baby Ganesh Detective Agency novels [ 4 ] – a series of crime novels set in India –featuring retired Mumbai police Inspector Ashwin Chopra and his sidekick, a baby elephant named Ganesha.
The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency [20] (1998) Jeff Randall: Dennis Spooner: Randall and Hopkirk (Deceased) (TV) (1969) Sunny Randall: Robert B. Parker: Family Honor [21] (1999) Ezekiel "Easy" Rawlins: Walter Mosley: Devil in a Blue Dress (1990) Jim Rockford: Richard T. Heffron: The Rockford Files (TV) (1974) Kiriti Roy: Nihar Ranjan Gupta ...
Gone, Baby, Gone is a 1998 detective novel by American writer Dennis Lehane, his fourth in his series featuring Boston private investigators Patrick Kenzie and Angela Gennaro. In 2007 a film adaptation of the same name was released, directed by Ben Affleck .
Detectives on Long Island are hunting for fresh clues about an architect arrested in connection with a string of slayings known as the Gilgo Beach killings. The ongoing work Monday marks an ...
The author received recognition for this series in 2004 with the Dagger in the Library from the Crime Writers Association and Author of the Year from British Book Awards. This novel received mixed reviews. One newspaper found the writing to create "an utter and truthful sense of place, of belonging" while another found the story lacking in ...
Ganesh–Vasanth are a duo appearing in Tamil-language crime thriller novels written by Sujatha. [1] Ganesh, introduced in the 1968 novel Nylon Kayiru , is a level-headed senior advocate who is mainly accompanied by his flirtatious young junior assistant lawyer Vasanth, introduced in the 1973 sequel Priya .
Kolaiyuthir Kalam (transl. Season of Murders) is a thriller novel by Sujatha.It is another interesting story featuring Ganesh-Vasanth duo. The story has many deathlike themes such as leaves falling from a tree which are contrastingly named, attracting the interest of readers.
Fred Otash (January 7, 1922 – October 5, 1992) was a Los Angeles police officer, private investigator, author, and a WWII Marine veteran, who became known as a Hollywood fixer, while operating as its "most infamous" private detective; he is most remembered as "the inspiration for Jack Nicholson's character Jake Gittes in the film, Chinatown. [1]