The House Opposite Audiobook By J. Jefferson Farjeon cover art

The House Opposite

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The House Opposite

By: J. Jefferson Farjeon
Narrated by: David John
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About this listen

From the Collins Crime Club archive, the first original novel to feature Ben the Cockney tramp, the unorthodox detective character created by J. Jefferson Farjeon, author of Mystery in White.

Strange things are happening in the untenanted houses of Jowle Street. There are unaccountable creakings and weird knockings on the door of No.29, where a homeless ex-sailor has taken up residence. But even stranger things are happening in the House Opposite, from where a beautiful woman in an evening gown brings Ben a mysterious message; and worse—the offer of a job!

Ben the ‘passing tramp’ was immortalised on film by Alfred Hitchcock in the film Number 17, based on a popular ’twenties stage play and novelisation by journalist-turned-author Joe Jefferson Farjeon. The House Opposite (1931) was the first full-length original novel to feature Ben, a reluctant down-at-heels Cockney sleuth, who went on to feature in six more successful detective thrillers from 1931 to 1952.

©2015 J. Jefferson Farjeon (P)2015 HarperCollins Publishers Limited
Amateur Sleuths Crime Fiction Detective Fiction Historical Mystery Traditional Detectives
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Critic reviews

‘Jefferson Farjeon is quite unsurpassed for creepy skill in mysterious adventures.’ Dorothy L. Sayers

‘There may be contemporary story writers who are equals of Mr Farjeon in the ability to put the reader swiftly and wholly under the spell of the eerie and uncanny – but they have not come within our reading.’ New York World

What listeners say about The House Opposite

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Struggled to finish

The story was just ok. There are other crime classic stories that were more interesting.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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Didn't hold my interest

For the most part, the story takes place in two houses facing each other across a rundown street. I was confused, especially when the plot moved to the second house (the bad guys) and have put the book aside. I am not interested enough in who did what and why.

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4 people found this helpful