The Case of the Naughty Wife

The Case of the Naughty Wife

Author: Malcolm Noble

Publisher: Troubador Publishing Ltd

Published: 2010-11-01

Total Pages: 185

ISBN-13: 1848764731

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The Timberdick Mysteries are a series of murder stories set in the sleazy back-streets of a south coast seaport in post-war Britain. The amateur detective is a call-girl who solves the mysteries by listening carefully to what people say. “I got there by thinking, not by fingerprints,” she tells her policeman friend in the first novel. The Case of the Naughty Wife is the latest Timberdick mystery, eagerly awaited by readersCan Glenn Miller’s lost trombone be the key to Timberdick’s latest murder mystery? When the Hoboken Arms burns down, the butchered body of a wayward husband is found in the yard. The next morning, Timberdick has to cope with a dead Admiral on her front room carpet. The Chief Constable’s wife blames an escaped convict but Timberdick’s not so sure. She knows that her favourite policeman, Glenn Miller’s mysterious trombone and the Chief Constable’s wife were in a country pub in January 1945. Now, in 1966, they’re together again.Timbers is sure that the trombone will lead to the murderer, but her every step forward is thwarted by thunder and lightning and wives who won’t behave!


A Selection of Cases Illustrative of the English Law of Tort

A Selection of Cases Illustrative of the English Law of Tort

Author: Courtney Stanhope Kenny

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2014-08-20

Total Pages: 657

ISBN-13: 1107455766

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

First published in 1928, this book contains an overview of a number of cases that established important precedents in English tort law. The topics covered include the general principles of liability for tort, the various kinds of torts, and the relations between tort and contract.


Slave-Wives, Single Women and “Bastards” in the Ancient Greek World

Slave-Wives, Single Women and “Bastards” in the Ancient Greek World

Author: Morris Silver

Publisher: Oxbow Books

Published: 2018-01-31

Total Pages: 240

ISBN-13: 178570866X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Greek scholars have produced a vast body of evidence bearing on nuptial practices that has yet to be mined by a professional economist. By standing on their shoulders, the author proposes and tests radically new interpretations of three important status groups in Greek history: the pallakē, the nothos, and the hetaira. It is argued that legitimate marriage – marriage by loan of the bride to the groom – was not the only form of legal marriage in classical Athens and the ancient Greek world generally. Pallakia – marriage by sale of the bride to the groom – was also legally recognized. The pallakē-wifeship transaction is a sale into slavery with a restrictive covenant mandating the employment of the sold woman as a wife. In this highly original and challenging new book, economist Morris Silver proposes and tests the hypothesis that the likelihood of bride sale rises with increases in the distance between the ancestral residence of the groom and the father’s household. Nothoi, the bastard children of pallakai, lacked the legal right to inherit from their fathers but were routinely eligible for Athenian citizenship. It is argued that the basic social meaning of hetaira (companion) is not ‘prostitute’ or ’courtesan,’ but ‘single woman’ – a woman legally recognized as being under her own authority (kuria). The defensive adaptation of single women is reflected in Greek myth and social practice by their grouping into packs, most famously the Daniads and Amazons.