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Dr Thorndyke Mysteries
Thorndyke novels and stories

Dr John Evelyn Thorndyke is a fictional detective in a long series of novels and short stories by R. Austin Freeman (1862–1943). Thorndyke was described by his author as a 'medical jurispractitioner': originally a medical doctor, he turned to the bar and became one of the first - in modern parlance - forensic scientists. His solutions were based on his method of collecting all possible data (including dust and pond weed) and making inferences from them before looking at any of the protagonists and motives in the crimes. (Freeman, it is said, conducted all experiments mentioned in the stories himself.) It is this method which gave rise to one of Freeman's most ingenious inventions, the inverted detective story, where the criminal act is described first and the interest lies in Thorndyke's subsequent unravelling of it.

John Thorndyke's Cases
aka Dr. Thorndyke's Cases

by R. Austin Freeman
(1909)
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The Mystery of 31 New inn
by R. Austin Freeman
(1912)
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The Red Thumb Mark
by R. Austin Freeman
(1907)
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The Vanishing Man
aka The Eye of Osiris

by R. Austin Freeman
(1911)
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Also see:-
The Uttermost Farthing by R. Austin Freeman

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