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Typed Letters Signed.

Typed Letters Signed.

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Typed Letters Signed.

by Thomson, Sir Basil

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  • Signed
  • first
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Concord, California, United States
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About This Item

Cotes du Nord, Sir Basil Thomson, 1933-1936, first edition.. This is a small archive of letters between Malcolm Johnson, an editor and executive with Doubleday, Doran, and Thomson, British colonial administrator to Fiji and Tonga, an author who wrote about these places, and a prison governor who eventually became head of the Criminal Investigations Department at the New Scotland Yard, the first letter is dated September 4, 1934 from Thomson to Johnson, he thanks him for the second edition of "P. C. Richardson's First Case" and reports that he is one-third through with its sequel, he adds, "What you tell me about police projects in America interests/me keenly. I am all in favor with Mr. Mulrooney's proposal to/introduce flogging as a deterrent because I know how it has worked/as a deterrent to highway robbery over here, but I am not in favour/of recurrent floggings. I have had to witness floggings in/British Convict Prisons and I can assure you that they are not/a pretty sight," adding, "If a reporter for one of your sensational newspapers/contrived to be present and wrote it up, there would be a wave/of horror and pity among the ladies of the Country Clubs throughout/the country and public sympathy would be transferred to the wrong/party," he continues his response about other police matters being considered in the United States, the letter has a total of 50 lines, signed in full, together with a carbon of a typed letter from Johnson to Thomson dated September 29, 1933 reporting that the plan for a national police force has fallen away, but that a greatly strengthened finger printing bureau in Washington has remained, he also reports that Thomson's The Kidnapper wouldn't work for the American reading public "because we like our crime fairly unadulterated and bloody," Thomson writes to Johnson again in a typed letter signed, dated February 5, 1934, saying that he considered and then rejected the idea of writing a book about Scotland Yard, he does report that "I am not far from finishing a third Richardson (as an inspector)/with a better plot than the others, I think in which R works alone," the letter is comprised of 63 lines, he writes again about the difference between the American prison system and the British, to wit, "The real/defect in your system seems to be in the prisons - not the police./We had the same trouble in England until we nationalized the/prisons under a central Board in 1977 and had uniformed rules and/monthly inspection, a separate cell for each prisoner, and regular/searching of cells and the persons of prisoners, which is done in/the bath-house when they take their weekly bath," Thomson writes to Johnson again in a typed letter signed dated April 2, 1934, it appears that Johnson had offered an advance on a book about Scotland Yard, Thomson agrees to the project, but he declines the advance until he delivers the manuscript, he gives some information about how Scotland Yard is set up and responsibilities are divided, he also informs Johnson of the situation on crime in France, he reports that "democracy has sunk in France. Some sort of revolution is inev-/itable in the near future I feel sure. One can only pin one's hope/on the astonishing power of recuperation of the French," Johnson responds in his carbon of a letter dated April 14, 1934 that 'The History of Scotland Yard,' the project they had planned, would "be the definitive work on the subject," together with another letter to Johnson from Thomson, dated January 27, 1936, he writes in part, "There are one or two points which you may like to put/right if there is time. It was Old Scotland Yard that was/on the site of the palace of the kings of Scotland: New Scotland/Yard was built of granite quarried by the convicts at Dartmoor/on the site of what was intended to be the Victorian Opera/House to replace Covent Garden". Very good.

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Details

Bookseller
James M. Dourgarian, Bookman US (US)
Bookseller's Inventory #
JD31418
Title
Typed Letters Signed.
Author
Thomson, Sir Basil
Book Condition
Used
Publisher
Cotes du Nord, Sir Basil Thomson, 1933-1936, first edition.

Terms of Sale

James M. Dourgarian, Bookman

Any item returnable for any reason within 7 days, if prior notice is given and the same item is returned in the same condition as sent. Payment in U.S. dollars only. In general, postage is $4 for the first item and $1 each thereafter. International orders should inquire.

About the Seller

James M. Dourgarian, Bookman

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2006
Concord, California

About James M. Dourgarian, Bookman

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First Edition
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