Adventures of Philip Marlowe - Single Episodes

PODCAST · arts

Adventures of Philip Marlowe - Single Episodes

ADVENTURES OF PHILIP MARLOWE Elements of mystery have always been represented in literature, but the detective story didn't arrive on the scene until the mid 1800's. Edgar Allan Poe's The Murders in the Rue Morgue , published in 1841, was the first. The Murder's main character, C. Auguste Dupin, was a brilliant detective who relied on superior deductive powers to solve the crime. He and his unnamed narrator companion solved this and two other mysteries. Later in the 19th century Sir Arthur Conan Doyle expanded on Poe's new concept in his Sherlock Holmes stories. Many think that Doyle patterned Holmes and Watson after Dupin and his friend. The Sherlock Holmes stories were wildly popular in England, and after Conan Doyle, the British continued to dominate the detective genre with other detectives who depended on keen observation and deductive logic to solve crimes. These detectives most commonly applied their brilliance to crimes in quaint country houses outside small idyllic villages. T

  1. 105
  2. 104
  3. 103
  4. 102
  5. 101
  6. 100
  7. 99
  8. 98
  9. 97
  10. 96
  11. 95
  12. 94
  13. 93
  14. 92
  15. 91
  16. 90
  17. 89
  18. 88
  19. 87
  20. 86
  21. 85
  22. 84
  23. 83
  24. 82
  25. 81
  26. 80
  27. 79
  28. 78
  29. 77
  30. 76
  31. 75
  32. 74
  33. 73
  34. 72
  35. 71
  36. 70
  37. 69
  38. 68
  39. 67
  40. 66
  41. 65
  42. 64
  43. 63
  44. 62
  45. 61
  46. 60
  47. 59
  48. 58
  49. 57
  50. 56

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

ADVENTURES OF PHILIP MARLOWE Elements of mystery have always been represented in literature, but the detective story didn't arrive on the scene until the mid 1800's. Edgar Allan Poe's The Murders in the Rue Morgue , published in 1841, was the first. The Murder's main character, C. Auguste Dupin, was a brilliant detective who relied on superior deductive powers to solve the crime. He and his unnamed narrator companion solved this and two other mysteries. Later in the 19th century Sir Arthur Conan Doyle expanded on Poe's new concept in his Sherlock Holmes stories. Many think that Doyle patterned Holmes and Watson after Dupin and his friend. The Sherlock Holmes stories were wildly popular in England, and after Conan Doyle, the British continued to dominate the detective genre with other detectives who depended on keen observation and deductive logic to solve crimes. These detectives most commonly applied their brilliance to crimes in quaint country houses outside small idyllic villages. T

HOSTED BY

Old Time Radio

Produced by Castify

CATEGORIES

URL copied to clipboard!