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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/52265826

4.50 from Paddington

A woman in a train sees another train passing in which a man is strangling someone. Who was the victim, and why was the body not found? A Miss Marple adventure.

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http://schema.org/about

http://schema.org/alternateName

  • "Miss Marple in 4.50 from Paddington"@en
  • "450 from Paddington"
  • "4.50 from Paddington"
  • "Four fifty from Paddington"@en
  • "Four fifty from Paddington"
  • "Miss Marple mystery"
  • "Joan Hickson reads"@en
  • "Four-fifty from Paddington"

http://schema.org/description

  • "A woman in a train sees another train passing in which a man is strangling someone. Who was the victim, and why was the body not found? A Miss Marple adventure."@en
  • "Elspeth McGillicuddy was not a woman usually given to hallucinations. But when she witnesses what appears to be a woman being strangled on a train and no one else sees it, no one reports it and no corpse is found she turns to her old friend Jane Marple to help solve the puzzle. Miss Marple asks her highly efficient and intelligent young acquaintance, Lucy Eyelesbarrow to infiltrate the Crackenthorpe family, who seem to be at the heart of the mystery, and help unmask a murderer."@en
  • "Elspeth McGillicuddy was not a woman usually given to hallucinations. But when she witnesses what appears to be a woman being strangled on a train and no one else sees it, no one reports it, and no corpse is found, she turns to her old friend Jane Marple to help solve the puzzle."@en
  • "Elspeth McGillicuddy was not a woman usually given to hallucinations. But when she witnesses what appears to be a woman being strangled on a train and no-one else sees it, no-one reports it and no corpse is found she turns to her old friend Jane Marple to help solve the puzzle. Marple asks her highly efficient and intelligent young acquaintance, Lucy Eyelesbarrow to infiltrate the Crackenthorpe family, who seem to be at the heart of the mystery, and help unmask a murderer--Publisher."
  • "Mrs. McGillicuddy witnesses a murder on a train running parallel to hers, but no one believes her except Miss Marple."@en
  • "For an instant, the two trains ran side by side. In that frozen moment, Elspeth McGillicuddy witnessed a murder. She saw the body crumple. Then the other train drew away. Everyone but Miss Jane Marple was willing to dismiss her friend's distraught report. Diligently studying train routes, timetables, and tracks, Miss Marple imagines where the body might be. Her detective genius includes playing the little-old-lady card and, ultimately, winning the challenge of wits."
  • "For an instant, the two trains ran side by side. In that frozen moment, Elspeth McGillicuddy witnessed a murder. She saw the body crumple. Then the other train drew away. Everyone but Miss Jane Marple was willing to dismiss her friend's distraught report. Diligently studying train routes, timetables, and tracks, Miss Marple imagines where the body might be. Her detective genius includes playing the little-old-lady card and, ultimately, winning the challenge of wits."@en
  • "A Radio 4 full-cast dramatisation starring June Whitfield as the deceptively mild Miss Marple with Ian Lavender, Joan Sims and Susannah Harker.Elspeth McGillicuddy is down from Scotland for a holiday and boards the 4:50 train from Paddington station to visit her friend, Miss Marple. During the journey, another train pulls alongside, and through the window Mrs McGillicuddy witnesses a tall, dark man strangling a blonde woman.She reports what she has seen, yet no one takes any notice..."
  • "For an instant, two trains ran side by side. In that frozen moment, Elspeth McGillicuddy witnessed a murder. She saw the body crumple. Then the other train drew away. And everyone but Miss Jane Marple was willing to dismiss her friend's distraught report."@en
  • "A woman was being murdered in a train as Mrs. McGullicuddy watched helplessly."
  • "Elspeth McGillicuddy was not a woman usually given to hallucinations. But when she witnesses a woman being strangled on a train, no one believes her. With no other witnesses and no corpse, she turns to the one person who can help, but how can Miss Marple solve a murder that appears not to have happened?"@en
  • "Elspeth McGillicuddy was not a woman usually given to hallucinations. But when she witnesses what appears to be a woman being strangled on a train and no one else sees it, no one reports it and no corpse is found she turns to her old friend, Jane Marple, to help solve the puzzle. Miss Marple asks her highly efficient and intelligent young acquaintance, Lucy Eyelesbarrow, to infiltrate the Crackenthorpe family, who seem to be at the heart of the mystery, and help unmask a murderer."
  • "When Elspeth McGillicuddy is the only witness to a brutal murder, for which not even a body is in evidence, it takes all of Miss Marple's remarkable ingenuity to discover the key to a secret which lies buried within a decaying country house."@en
  • "Two trains travel along side each other, but only for a brief moment. In that flash, however, a passenger witnesses a murder through the windows of the other train. Everyone is skeptical of this frantic passenger's claims, everyone except marvelous mystery solver Miss Marple."@en

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Downloadable audio books"@en
  • "Downloadable audio books"
  • "Sound recordings"
  • "DAISY books"@en
  • "Mystery radio programs"@en
  • "Kriminalromaner"
  • "Mystery"@en
  • "Audiobooks"@en
  • "Audiobooks"
  • "Mystery fiction"
  • "Mystery fiction"@en
  • "Downloadable audiobook"
  • "Tonkassette"
  • "Drama"@en
  • "Hörbuch"
  • "Fiction"
  • "Fiction"@en

http://schema.org/name

  • "4.50 from Paddington a Miss Marple mystery"
  • "4.50 from Paddington"
  • "4.50 from Paddington"@en
  • "4:50 from Paddington [sound recording]"
  • "4:50 from Paddington a Miss Marple mystery"@en
  • "4:50 from Paddington"
  • "4:50 from Paddington"@en

http://schema.org/workExample