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Captain Belval, learning of a threat to his beloved nurse Little Mother Coralie, rescues her from her would-be assailants and is promptly dragged into a plot involving her husband and millions of francs worth of gold. As layer upon layer of conspiracy emerges with no obvious thread to follow, there's only one man who can be counted on to uncover the truth. The Golden Triangle (also known as The Return of Arsène Lupin) is set a couple of years after the events of 813. It was published in 1917 in both the original French and this English translation, and was the first Arsène Lupin novel penned by Maurice Leblanc since The Crystal Stopper in 1912.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Captain Belval, learning of a threat to his beloved nurse Little Mother Coralie, rescues her from her would-be assailants and is promptly dragged into a plot involving her husband and millions of francs worth of gold. As layer upon layer of conspiracy emerges with no obvious thread to follow, there's only one man who can be counted on to uncover the truth. The Golden Triangle (also known as The Return of Arsène Lupin) is set a couple of years after the events of 813. It was published in 1917 in both the original French and this English translation, and was the first Arsène Lupin novel penned by Maurice Leblanc since The Crystal Stopper in 1912.
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Autorenporträt
Maurice Marie Émile Leblanc (1864 - 1941) was a French novelist and writer of short stories, known primarily as the creator of the fictional gentleman thief and detective Arsène Lupin, often described as a French counterpart to Arthur Conan Doyle's creation Sherlock Holmes. Leblanc was largely considered little more than a writer of short stories for various French periodicals when the first Arsène Lupin story appeared in a series of short stories serialized in the magazine Je Sais Tout, starting in No. 6, dated 15 July 1905. Clearly created at editorial request under the influence of and in reaction to, the wildly successful Sherlock Holmes stories, the roguish and glamorous Lupin was a surprise success and Leblanc's fame and fortune beckoned. In total, Leblanc went on to write twenty-one Lupin novels or collections of short stories.