Patrick Quentin
Author of A Puzzle for Fools
About the Author
Patrick Quentin, Quentin Patrick, Jonathan Stagge, and Q. Patrick were various pen names used by a group of co-writers.
Hugh Wheeler – one of the writers contributing to the series of crime-thrillers attributed to 'Patrick Quentin' – took over as the sole author of the remaining Quentin books during the 1950's as his writing partners bowed out.
(ger) Patrick Quentin, Quentin Patrick, Jonathan Stagge, und Q. Patrick waren Pseudonyme einer Gruppe von gemeinschaftlich arbeitenden Autoren.
Hugh Callingham Wheeler - one of the writers contributing to the series of crime-thrillers attributed to 'Patrick Quentin' - took over as the sole author of the remaining Quentin books during the 1950's as his writing partners bowed out.
Series
Works by Patrick Quentin
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Wheeler, Hugh Callingham
- Other names
- Patrick, Q. (pseudonym)
Callingham, Dick (pseudonym)
Stagge, Jonathan (pseudonym) - Birthdate
- 1912-03-19 (Hugh Wheeler)
1901-08 (Richard Wilson Webb)
1906-04-30 (Martha Mott Kelley)
1902-06-03 (Mary Louise White Aswell) - Date of death
- 1987-07-26 (Hugh Wheeler)
1966-12 (Richard Wilson Webb)
2005 (Martha Mott Kelley)
1984-12-24 (Mary Louise White Aswell) - Gender
- n/a
- Relationships
- Wheeler, Hugh
Webb, Richard Wilson
Kelley, Martha Mott
Aswell, Mary Louise - Disambiguation notice
- Patrick Quentin, Quentin Patrick, Jonathan Stagge, and Q. Patrick were various pen names used by a group of co-writers.
Hugh Wheeler – one of the writers contributing to the series of crime-thrillers attributed to 'Patrick Quentin' – took over as the sole author of the remaining Quentin books during the 1950's as his writing partners bowed out.
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Reviews
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Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 89
- Also by
- 40
- Members
- 1,458
- Popularity
- #17,624
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 28
- ISBNs
- 209
- Languages
- 14
- Favorited
- 2
The first chapter was funny but the condescending eye-dialect for Mrs Bigger and the author showing off his familiarity with university slang rapidly got tiresome - one more "sported oak" and I would have screamed. The actual mystery was good but the romance with the Profile was very unconvincing.