H.R.F. Keating Books In Order
Publication Order of Inspector Ghote Books
The Perfect Murder | (1964) | |
Inspector Ghote’s Good Crusade | (1966) | |
Inspector Ghote Caught in Meshes | (1967) | |
Inspector Ghote Hunts the Peacock | (1968) | |
Inspector Ghote Plays a Joker | (1969) | |
Inspector Ghote Breaks an Egg | (1970) | |
Inspector Ghote Goes By Train | (1971) | |
Inspector Ghote Trusts the Heart | (1972) | |
Bats Fly Up for Inspector Ghote | (1974) | |
Filmi, Filmi, Inspector Ghote | (1976) | |
Inspector Ghote Draws a Line | (1979) | |
The Murder of the Maharajah | (1980) | |
Go West, Inspector Ghote | (1981) | |
The Sheriff of Bombay | (1984) | |
Under a Monsoon Cloud | (1986) | |
The Body in the Billiard Room | (1987) | |
Dead on Time | (1988) | |
Inspector Ghote, His Life and Crimes | (1989) | |
The Iciest Sin | (1990) | |
Cheating Death | (1992) | |
Doing Wrong | (1993) | |
Asking Questions | (1996) | |
Bribery, Corruption Also | (1999) | |
Breaking and Entering | (2000) | |
Inspector Ghote’s First Case | (2008) | |
A Small Case for Inspector Ghote? | (2009) |
Publication Order of Harriet Martens Books
The Hard Detective | (2000) | |
A Detective in Love | (2001) | |
A Detective Under Fire | (2002) | |
The Dreaming Detective | (2003) | |
A Detective at Death’s Door | (2004) | |
One Man and His Bomb | (2006) | |
Rules, Regs and Rotten Eggs | (2007) |
Publication Order of Harriet Unwin Mystery Books
The Governess | (1983) | |
The Man of Gold | (1985) | |
Into the Valley of Death | (1986) |
Publication Order of Standalone Novels
Death and the Visiting Firemen | (1959) | |
Zen There Was Murder | (1960) | |
A Rush on the Ultimate | (1961) | |
The Dog It Was That Died | (1962) | |
Death of a Fat God | (1963) | |
Is Skin Deep, Is Fatal | (1965) | |
The Strong Man | (1971) | |
The Underside | (1974) | |
Murder Must Appetize | (1975) | |
A Remarkable Case of Burglary | (1975) | |
Murder by Death | (1976) | |
A Long Walk to Wimbledon | (1978) | |
Mrs. Craggs: Crimes Cleaned Up | (1985) | |
The Rich Detective | (1993) | |
The Good Detective | (1995) | |
The Soft Detective | (1998) | |
The Bad Detective | (1999) | |
Jack, the Lady Killer | (1999) |
Publication Order of Short Story Collections
In Kensington Gardens Once… | (1997) |
Publication Order of Non-Fiction Books
Blood on My Mind | (1972) | |
Sherlock Holmes | (1979) | |
Whodunit?: A Guide To Crime, Suspense and Spy Fiction | (1982) | |
Writing Crime Fiction | (1986) | |
Crime and Mystery | (1987) | |
Great Crimes | (1991) | |
The Bedside Companion to Crime | (1997) |
Publication Order of Anthologies
Agatha Christie | (1977) | |
John Creasey’s Crime Collection, 1977 | (1977) | |
Chilling and Killing | (1978) | |
Crime Waves 1 | (1978) | |
Verdict of Thirteen | (1979) | |
Ready or Not: Here Come Fourteen Frightening Stories! | (1987) | |
Murder for Christmas | (1987) | |
The Misadventures of Sherlock Holmes | (1989) | |
1st Culprit | (1992) | |
The Man Who… | (1992) | |
3rd Culprit | (1994) | |
The Crown Crime Companion | (1995) | |
Win, Lose or Die | (1996) | |
100 Sneaky Little Sleuth Stories | (1997) | |
Criminal Records | (2000) |
H. R. F. Keating
Henry Raymond Fitzwalter “Harry” Keating was born Halloween 1926 and was an English crime fiction author that is best known for his “Inspector Ghote” series.
He was known as Harry to his family and friends, and was born in St. Leonards-on-Sea, Sussex. When he was just eight years old, he typed out his very first story. He was educated first at Merchant Taylor’s School before going to Trinity College in Dublin.
In the year 1956, he moved to London so he could work as a journalist for The Daily Telegraph and was the crime books reviewer for The Times for fifteen years. Keating served from 1970 until 1971 as the chairman of the Crime Writers’ Association, and from 1983 until 1984 he was the chairman of the Society of Authors. From 1985 until the year 2000, he was the president of the Detection Club. He was a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.
He won two CWA Gold Dagger Awards, and in the year 1996, he was given the CWA Cartier Diamond Dagger for his outstanding service to crime fiction. Keating was given the George N. Dove Award in the year 1995.
Besides writing about Ghote, he wrote about DCI Harriet Martens, which started in the year 2000, when “The Hard Detective” was released. Keating also published a science fiction novel, a guide on “Writing Crime Fiction”, and a biography called “Agatha Christie: First Lady of Crime”. Keating even wrote under the pen name Evelyn Hervey.
Keating lived with his wife Sheila Mitchell (an actress). On March 27, 2011, he died at the age of eighty-four.
“The Hard Detective” is the first novel in the “Harriet Martens” series, which was released in the year 2000. Detective Chief Inspector Harriet Martens has been required to make it within a man’s world. It was this very toughness that inspired her own successful Stop the Rot campaign, which has so provoked all of the local criminals. Now, two of her officers have just died within mere hours of one another and Harriet thinks that they both were murdered.
Harriet Martens is a very likable lead character, who is pretty intense, secretive, and wanted to keep her work life and home life separate. There is an intriguing mystery. Readers liked seeing the camaraderie between the cops and how they had to pull together in order to save one of their own.
“A Detective in Love” is the second novel in the “Harriet Martens” series, which was released in the year 2001. At six-thirty in the morning, Detective Superintendent Harriet Martens got the call that told her Britain’s top tennis star and a media darling, Bubbles Xingara (who was wonderfully pretty), has been killed on the grounds of her huge country house.
Harriet is now leading a case that is going to have the media of the world, who has begun coming out for Wimbledon’s start out in full force. It is not the investigation that will explode Harriet’s life, for Harriet (mother and wife) has just fallen madly in love with one of her fellow officers.
“A Detective Under Fire” is the third novel in the “Harriet Martens” series, which was released in the year 2002. DCI Harriet has been given the nickname “Hard Detective” because of the tough stance she has. Here, she will have to turn the attention away from the criminal world to her own department. Since this time she is being put in charge of an internal investigation.
“The Dreaming Detective” is the fourth novel in the “Harriet Martens” series, which was released in the year 2004. Summoned by the fanatically determined and new Chief Constable, Harriet Martens is stunned to be greeted with a blunt question: Who is it that killed the Preacher? She is required to use some of the newest DNA techniques to look into the murder that happened thirty years ago.
A charismatic youth called the Boy Preacher that was strangled in the empty ballroom of the city’s Imperial Hotel. It is a building that is now stated to be demolished. However, she discovers that just seven had any access to the scene, and Harriet is going to need to rely on her talent to make connections that past investigators missed.
“A Detective at Death’s Door” is the fifth novel in the “Harriet Martens” series, which was released in the year 2004. Luckily for Harriet, her husband, John was reading an Agatha Christie novel while the detective was sunning at the club’s pool. Otherwise, she would have died a long time before this story had started. A killer puts in a deadly addition into what she was drinking. Surprised to see the same symptoms of poison he was reading about, he was able to act quickly.
He saved her in time to save her life, she was unable to escape unscathed. She was stuck in a bed too long before she got well enough to join in on the search party to track down her would be killer. Being bedridden gives anyone plenty of time just to think, and Harriet realized this attempt to kill her was the first by an unknown that would quickly earn the title “serial killer”.
After there were more killings, Harriet was still having a hard time convincing any of her colleagues. They argued with her, saying the victims were much too unrelated to one another, nor did they know each other, they had way too different occupations, and socially and economically were far apart. They also lived far away, in separate parts of the town. Despite being English citizens, they didn’t have anything in common.
Correction, they just had nothing in common that Harriet’s fellow officers were able to see. Nobody could say that Harriet is nothing if not tenacious. Once she can get out of bed, if a tad shakily, she is able to come up with some rather helpful ideas. The whole time, in the back of her very mind, she realizes the murderer, still with his ego bruised, has to be burning up to complete what he, or she, started.