Thunderbolt's Waxwork

· Penguin · Lukija: Robert Glenister
Äänikirja
2 h 34 min
Lyhentämätön
Kelvollinen
Arvioita ja arvosteluja ei ole vahvistettu Lue lisää
Haluatko näytteen, jonka kesto on 10 min? Kuuntele milloin tahansa, jopa offline-tilassa. 
Lisää

Tietoa tästä äänikirjasta

Brought to you by Penguin.

Lambeth, South London, 1894. Meet the New Cut Gang - Sharky Bob, Benny, Thunderbolt, Bridie and the Peretti twins: the greatest detectives since Sexton Blake.

They inhabit the streets around Lambeth Walk and the New Cut in 1894, a place bristling with gangsters, bookies, pickpockets, horse thieves and the occasional policeman. But who's passing counterfeit coins 'round Lambeth? Surely not Thunderbolt's dad, who's just been arrested...

© Philip Pullman 1994 (P) Penguin Audio 2021

Tietoja kirjoittajasta

Philip Pullman was born in Norwich and educated in England, Zimbabwe, Australia and Wales. He studied English at Exeter College, Oxford.

His first children's book, Count Karlstein, was published in 1982. To date, he has published thirty-three books, read by children and adults alike. His most famous work is the His Dark Materials trilogy. These books have been honoured by several prizes including the Carnegie Medal, the Guardian Children's Book Prize, and (for The Amber Spyglass) the Whitbread Book of the Year Award - the first time that prize had been given to a children's book. Pullman has received numerous other awards, including the Eleanor Farjeon Award and the Astrid Lindgren Award. He was knighted in the 2019 New Year's Honours List for Services to Literature.

Arvioi tämä äänikirja

Kerro meille mielipiteesi.

Kuuntelutiedot

Älypuhelimet ja tabletit
Asenna Google Play Kirjat ‑sovellus Androidille tai iPadille/iPhonelle. Se synkronoituu automaattisesti tilisi kanssa, jolloin voit lukea online- tai offline-tilassa missä tahansa oletkin.
Kannettavat ja pöytätietokoneet
Voit lukea Google Playsta ostamiasi kirjoja tietokoneesi verkkoselaimella.

Lisää kirjoittajalta Philip Pullman

Samankaltaiset äänikirjat

Kertoja: Robert Glenister