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The Four Just Men
The Four Just Men
The Four Just Men
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The Four Just Men

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The thrilling debut of the Four Just Men, the world’s most sophisticated vigilantes 

In a time of turmoil and intrigue, with governments around the world buffeted by the winds of radical change, four men vow to do whatever it takes to ensure that justice prevails. They kill without remorse, their victims powerful men and women guilty of the vilest of crimes: rape, embezzlement, extortion, murder. Now the British foreign secretary finds himself in the crosshairs of Manfred, Gonsalez, Poiccart, and Thery—the newest member of the four and a man with a very special skill.

Sir Philip Ramon’s Aliens Political Offences Bill threatens to expel honest revolutionaries from the safety of England and return them to their corrupt native lands, where torture and death await. The Four Just Men publicly ask Ramon to withdraw the bill. When he refuses, they put their ingenious plan into action.

Edgar Wallace self-published The Four Just Men and bankrupted himself promoting it. One century later, it stands as one of the most innovative and influential thrillers ever written.

This ebook features a new introduction by Otto Penzler and has been professionally proofread to ensure accuracy and readability on all devices.
 
The Four Just Men is the first book in the Four Just Men series, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 27, 2014
ISBN9781480493919
Author

Edgar Wallace

Edgar Wallace (1875–1932) was one of the most popular and prolific authors of his era. His hundred-odd books, including the groundbreaking Four Just Men series and the African adventures of Commissioner Sanders and Lieutenant Bones, have sold over fifty million copies around the world. He is best remembered today for his thrillers and for the original version of King Kong, which was revised and filmed after his death. 

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Rating: 3.3 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This was an enjoyable read. An audio from the free summer program and I enjoyed the story and the narrator. The Four Just Men are a group of men who are seek to set right injustices even if death is required. It is a fun mystery thriller.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Not really worth it. A dimestore novel, but it's outlived its usefulness. Too many characters, and a plot which is promoted as "one of the great puzzles of crime fiction" but really hangs entirely on contrivance. Points, though, for some of the unexpected deviations - the story of Billy Marks is affectingly handled - and for its surprising timeliness: a story about well-meaning activists who become terrorists in their bid to stop an illegal immigration bill planned by self-righteous-but-decent politicians. Interesting, but unworthy.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Wallace frct ig success as a writre, about a group of men who take it upon themselves to might out what they regard as justice
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Really rather tedious. Sadly this novel hasn't aged well.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    'The Four Just Men' of the title are a criminal group that only kill their victims under strict rules. Those who commit crimes,which are perhaps not seen as crimes by all,are their prey. They work under the most stringent codes of conduct such as delivering a number of warnings that if their crimes or conduct is changed,then the death threats will be removed.The British Foreign Secretary intends to pass a Bill which is thought by many to be flawed and which will do much harm. The Just Men give him his warnings which he intends to ignore although he is badly frightened.Edgar Wallace has once more given us a superb thriller of the 'Locked Room' type. An excellent read and one in which the Just Men excel.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Four Just Men is a mystery by Edgar Wallace, one of the most popular writers in England in the early 20th century. The self-named Four Just Men are vigilantes of a sort, traveling to various parts of the world to correct what they perceive as slights to justice. They are in the business of righting wrongs, fatally so.In the particular tale told by Wallace they are acting atypically. They are proclaiming their intent publically and being pro-active, i.e. they threaten to commit an act of murder on a certain high minister in the British government, should the government pursue what they perceive to be an unjust course of action.As Wallace's tale unfolds we see the history of the Four Just Men emerge and begin to understand the motives for their actions. Cases of curious deaths now find that there is a thread linking them. That the Four Just Men are murderers is not in doubt, but the cases in which they have acted to appear to be egregious miscarriages of justice. Perhaps there is a just purpose in their course of action.Wallace's tale is well-told. There is a steady level of suspense but crafted in such a way as to be reasonably plausible. The outcome is never clear until the tale's very end. And you'll have to read for yourself, because it is too good to give away in a review!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    THE FOUR JUST MEN was Edgar Wallace's first foray into mystery writing. Initially self published, the public was then invited to supply the solution to the mystery for prices amounting to a total of £1000 (incidentally the same amount that was offered for the capture of the four just men in the novel itself).The marketing campaign Wallace had designed was ingenious and quite ahead of its time, though crippled him financially for quite some time.The book is a quick and fast read with an interesting concept: A group of men serve as judges and executioners for injustices worldwide that would otherwise not be captured. Trouble is that the case in this novel really doesn't make all that much sense. A politician is threatened with his execution unless he drops a controversial new bill. One would think that a bill could be passed whether or not one single politician is alive or dead and in actual fact, although the sympathies are supposed to be lying with our anti-heroes, it is indeed the smug politician who ends up getting the reader's sympathies for his head strong insistence on going on with what he considers to be the right thing.Still, this is a Must Read for anyone even remotely interested in Edgar Wallace.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Interesting twist to the mystery format - the book starts with the "4 just men" (vigilantes) planning the death of English minister Ramon and the murder doesn't occur until almost the very end.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The Four Just Men is a story about a group of men with a degree of intellect and financial means that allows them to dispense their own form of justice when they feel that conventional justice will not do an adequate job. In this book, they have sent a death threat to a ranking politician threatening to kill him unless he kills a Bill that he's working to put into law. We are only given a few details about the Four Just Men and their history. In addition to trying to stop this bill, they have also meted out their own justice in other countries around the globe where they feel only they are able to bring balance where the law has failed.I found it intriguing that the book focuses on this group of vigilantes, setting them up as the heroes versus the government and the police. The idea of vigilante justice like this is something that's pretty common in dystopian novels or in cases where justice is meted out against a person or organization that is blatantly criminal (as seen in superhero stories) but in this story, I didn't feel that sufficient evidence was given to show that the actions of the Four Just Men was wholly warranted. Setting that aside, I found the story and its methods to be interesting. The men portrayed as highly civilized men of honor. Even their terroristic processes are bound by honor as they are sworn to first deliver warnings and demands to their target in order to give him ample time to "do the right thing." In other words, they do not glory in murder but rather just want to convince people to live and uphold the law in the way they desire.Most of the action is seen through the point of view of the Four Just Men as they work through the machinations of their plot. They deliberate amongst themselves as to whether or not the Foreign Secretary will accede to their request or if they will be forced to kill him. There is also a bit of unease in their group since during this particular mission they were required to employ the assistance from someone outside their group and they are unsure of his reliability and trustworthiness.At the same time, we see the actions of Scotland Yard and of the Foreign Secretary and other government officials as they deal with the incoming threats and work to find and stop the actions of the Four Just Men. I was pleased to see that Scotland Yard is presented as highly competent rather than a bunch of fools. They struggle to find the Four Just Men because they are outmatched, not because they are incompetent. I also enjoyed the discussions presented between the politicians. The stubborn nature felt a bit stereotypically satirical but also potentially realistic.Without spoiling too much, I will say that the Four Just Men did carry out multiple acts of mayhem in the course of the book. Their methods were mysterious and extravagant while also employing methods that could be explained with simple logic. This unraveling of the plot was certainly enjoyable.Overall, I had mixed feelings on this novel both while reading it and upon completing it. As mentioned, I found the character interactions and development to be fun and interesting. The mystery and its reveal were also fun. The main problem I had was around the ambiguity of who I should truly be rooting for. I think it is in that grey area that this novel truly shines. It makes a stark claim of good versus evil but it leaves the nuances blurry around the edges. In this, it mirrors the real world in many ways. All too often we hope for clearly defined boundaries of right versus wrong as we look to see justice carried out but instead we can usually find reasons to show at least some sympathy for both sides of the argument. In those cases, who is to decide where the balance truly lies and who is it that should be judge, jury and executioner? It is these lingering thoughts that make this novel stand out as a hidden classic to be enjoyed more than a century later.****4 out of 5 stars

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The Four Just Men - Edgar Wallace

Introduction

Edgar (Richard Horatio) Wallace (1875–1932) was an English novelist, prolific short story writer, dramatist, journalist—and probably the most popular thriller writer of all time.

Born in Greenwich, the illegitimate son of actress Marie (Polly) Richards and actor Richard Horatio Edgar Marriott (who appeared on the birth records as Walter Wallace), he was adopted by George Freeman at the age of nine days and raised as Dick Freeman, one of the eleven children of a fish porter. He learned the truth about his parentage when he was eleven years old and needed birth papers for a job. A year later his formal education ended, and he held a series of odd jobs until he joined the Royal West Kent Regiment at eighteen, later transferring to the Medical Staff Corps. Sent to South Africa, he wrote war poems (later collected in The Mission That Failed, 1898, and other volumes) and served as a correspondent during the Boer War for Reuters, as well as South African and London-based newspapers. In 1900 he returned to England and the following year married Ivy Caldecott; they were divorced in 1918, after having four children—Eleanor (who died as a child), Bryan, who was also a writer, Patricia, and Michael. Wallace married Jim, his secretary, in 1921; they had one daughter, Penelope.

Since publishers lacked faith in his work, Wallace founded the Tallis Press and published The Four Just Men, his first mystery and best-known work, in 1905. A vast advertising campaign and a unique publicity gimmick—a £500 reward to any reader who could guess how the murder of the British Foreign Secretary was committed—resulted in enormous sales and great financial losses, for there were several correct solutions and everyone had to be paid. In this tale, four wealthy dilettantes (actually three, since one dies before the series begins) find pleasure in administering justice when the law is unable, or unwilling, to do so. Wallace wrote several sequels to The Four Just Men: The Council of Justice (1908); The Just Men of Cordova (1917); The Law of the Four Just Men (1921; US title: Again the Three Just Men, 1933); The Three Just Men (1925); and Again the Three Just Men (1928; US title: The Law of the Three Just Men, 1931).

By 1920 Wallace was writing at a prodigious pace, ultimately producing 173 books (more than half involving crime and mystery) and seventeen plays. He once dictated an entire novel during a single weekend; on another occasion he plotted six books simultaneously; and he dictated serials at such a furious pace that he never knew what would happen in the ensuing chapters. His output was matched by his popularity. It has often been stated that in the 1920s and 1930s, one of every four books read in England was written by Wallace, the King of Thrillers.

This immense popularity earned Wallace a fortune. During the last decade of his life, he earned the equivalent of a quarter of a million dollars a year—and yet, because of his extravagant lifestyle, he left enormous debts when he died. He often lost $500 or more a day at the racetrack, but his lack of success at picking horses did not diminish his enthusiasm for the sport. He was a longtime racing editor for newspapers and wrote several books with racing themes and backgrounds. Motion pictures and television programs based on Wallace’s stories are everywhere.

As might be expected of such prolificacy, much of the writing is slapdash and cliché ridden, characterization is two-dimensional, and situations are frequently trite, relying on intuition, coincidence, and much pointless, confusing movement to convey a sense of action. The heroes and villains are clearly labeled, and the stock characters—humorous servants, baffled policemen, breathless heroines—could be interchanged from one book to another. The dialogue is convincing, however, with strong elements of comedy at appropriate times, as well as effectively created suspense.

One of the best—and rarest—Wallace books is The Tomb of Ts’in (1916), actually little more than a revised version of his Captain Tatham of Tatham Island (1909), which was slightly revised in a different way for another publisher in 1916 and issued as The Island of Galloping Gold. The main character of The Man Who Bought London (1915), Kerry King, is an American millionaire who plans a revolution and forms a gigantic syndicate to buy houses and shops in London as part of his scheme. The Green Archer (1923) is a famous story about a man found murdered after having quarreled with the owner of a haunted castle. The ghost is the Green Archer, and the corpse has a long green arrow in his chest. In The Crimson Circle (1922) Derrick Yale, the amazing psychometrical detective, is pitted against Scotland Yard.

Other popular Wallace characters include Sanders, the commissioner who maintains law and order for the crown in South Africa, assisted by his drawling lieutenant, Bones (Sanders of the River, 1911, and others); Oliver Rater, a silent Scotland Yard detective (The Orator, 1928); Surefoot Smith, a CID man who hates science and loves beer, and has to deal with an eccentric millionaire in The Clue of the Silver Key (1930; US title: The Silver Key); James Mortlake, the Black, a member of US Intelligence who wears black clothing and a black mask (The Man from Morocco, 1926; US title: The Black); Arthur Milton, the Ringer, an underworld character who, like the Four Just Men, always gets his man (The Gaunt Stranger, 1925; US title: The Ringer, 1926); financier Tony Braid, known as the Twister because he has only one method for extricating himself from difficulties—telling the truth (The Twister, 1928); a pretty female crook who steals from people with bloated bank accounts (Four Square Jane, 1929; a shady character called the Squealer, who is in on every major jewel robbery in London—if the thief will not split with him, he tells the police where the culprit can be found (The Squeaker, 1927;US title: The Squealer); and the benign Mr. J.G. Reeder.

Films

Literally hundreds of screen melodramas have been fashioned from Wallace material. The highlights are below; the first three are American silent serials.

The Green Archer. Pathé serial, 1925. Allene Ray, Walter Miller. Directed by Spencer Gordon Bennet. From the 1923 novel. A mysterious costumed archer lurks on the grounds of Bellamy Castle, helping a reporter expose the secrets of its reclusive millionaire owner.

The Mark of the Frog. Pathé serial, 1928. Donald Reed, Margaret Morris, Frank Lackteen. Directed by Arch Heath. Based on The Fellowship of the Frog (1925). In search of a vanished treasure, a criminal ring headed by the hooded Frog terrorizes New York.

The Terrible People. Pathé serial, 1928. Ray, Miller. Directed by Bennet. From the 1926 novel. An heiress is imperiled by the gang of a criminal who seems to have returned from the dead.

The Terror. Warner Brothers, 1928. Louise Fazenda, May McAvoy, Edward Everett Horton, John Miljan. Directed by Roy Del Ruth. Warner Brothers’ second all-talking feature, the film was based on Wallace’s play of 1927. A Scotland Yard operative goes to an old house while searching for a murderer who mutilates his victims.

The Ringer. British Lion, 1928. Leslie Faber, Annette Benson, Lawson Butt. Directed by Arthur Maude. Screenplay by Wallace, from his play, which began a successful London run in 1926 and became the most frequently filmed Wallace work. A criminal skilled in disguises eliminates his enemies despite heavy police surveillance.

The Flying Squad. British Lion, 1929. Wyndham Standing, Dorothy Bartlam, Bryan Edgar Wallace, and Carol Reed (in bit roles as petty crooks). Directed by Maude. From the 1928 novel.London’s motorized police breaks up a criminal gang.

The Clue of the New Pin. British Lion, 1929. Benita Hume, Kim Peacock, Donald Calthrop, John Gielgud. Directed by Maude. From the 1923 novel. A rich recluse is murdered in an absolutely sealed room.

The Squeaker. British Lion, 1930. Percy Marmont, Anne Grey, Gordon Harker. Screenplay and direction by Wallace. The first all-talking British Wallace film, based on the 1927 novel. London’s jewelry thieves are at the mercy of a superfence (actually the head of a benevolent society).

The Menace. Columbia, 1932. H.B. Warner, Bette Davis, Walter Byron. Directed by Roy William Neill. Based on The Feathered Serpent (1927). A man sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of his father is certain that his stepmother is actually guilty.

The Frightened Lady. British Lion, 1932. Norman McKinnel, Cathleen Nesbitt, Emlyn Williams. Directed by T. Hayes Hunter. Wallace also used this material in his play The Case of the Frightened Lady (1933; US title: Criminal at Large). A titled widow nervously consults the police, fearing that someone in her secret-passage-filled manor, Mark’s Priory, is trying to strangle the fiancée of her mad young son (Williams).

King Kong. RKO, 1933. Fay Wray, Bruce Cabot, Robert Armstrong. Directed by Ernest B. Schoedsack and Merian C. Cooper. Wallace died in Hollywood while working on the original screenplay of this adventure epic.

Before Dawn. RKO, 1933. Stuart Erwin, Dorothy Wilson, Warner Oland. Directed by Irving Pichel. Based on Wallace’s short story Death Watch. A female spiritualist, in a trance, tries to find the treasure hidden in a supposedly haunted house.

Mystery Liner. Monogram, 1934. Noah Beery, Astrid Allwyn, Gustav von Seyffertitz. Directed by Neill. Based on Wallace’s story The Ghost of John Holling. Murders take place on a liner at sea, while an inventor on board experiments with wireless control of ships.

The Return of the Terror. First National, 1934. Mary Astor, Lyle Talbot, John Halliday. Directed by Howard Bretherton. Loosely based on The Terror, the 1927 play. A man accused of murdering three patients returns to an eerie sanatorium one stormy night.

Sanders of the River. London Film, 1935. Leslie Banks, Paul Robeson. Directed by Zoltan Korda. Based on the 1911 novel. Wallace’s tribute to British colonialism centers on efforts to keep peace among savage African tribes.

The Crimson Circle. Wainwright (British), 1936. Hugh Wakefield, Alfred Drayton, Beery, June Duprez, Niall MacGinnis. Directed by Reginald Denham. Based on the 1922 novel (there was also a 1922 silent film). The victims of a mysterious blackmail gang—and members of the gang itself—are found dead, marked with a red circle.

The Girl from Scotland Yard. Paramount, 1937. Karen Morley, Robert Baldwin, Eduardo Ciannelli. Directed by Robert Vignola. From The Square Emerald (1926; US title: The Girl from Scotland Yard). The heroine pursues the mad creator of a death ray.

The Squeaker (US title: Murder on Diamond Row). London Film, 1937. Edmund Lowe, Ann Todd, Sebastian Shaw, Robert Newton, Alastair Sim. Directed by William K. Howard. Based on the 1927 novel. Again, London’s fences are imperiled.

The Four Just Men (US title: The Secret Four). Ealing (British), 1939. Hugh Sinclair, Griffith Jones, Francis L. Sullivan, Frank Lawton, Anna Lee, Basil Sydney, Alan Napier. Directed by Walter Forde. Based on the 1905 novel; previously filmed as a British silent film in 1921. An actor, a producer, a costume designer, and a millionaire join forces to dispense justice privately; they eliminate a traitorous member of Parliament.

Dark Eyes of London (US title: The Human Monster). Argyle (British), 1939. Béla Lugosi, Hugh Williams, Greta Gynt. Directed by Walter Summers. Based on the 1924 novel. Scotland Yard probes the link between the kindly, gray-haired director of a workhouse for blind men and a shady insurance broker.

The Green Archer. Columbia serial, 1940. Victor Jory, Irish Meredith, James Craven. Directed by James W. Horne. Based on the 1923 novel. Criminals again occupy Bellamy Castle while the masked archer casts his shadow against the walls.

The Door with Seven Locks (US title: Chamber of Horrors). Pathé (British), 1940. Banks, Lilli Palmer. Directed by Norman Lee. Based on the 1926 novel. Weekend guests at a country house become involved in an attempt to steal a jewel inheritance.

The Case of the Frightened Lady (US title: The Frightened Lady). Pennant (British), 1940. Marius Goring, Penelope Dudley Ward, Helen Haye. Directed by George King. Based on The Frightened Lady (1933 US title: The Case of the Frightened Lady). Neurotic young Lord Lebanon (Goring) is heard playing the piano wildly as stranglings occur at Mark’s Priory.

During the war decade, Wallace received less attention, and there was only one important adaptation during the 1950s.

The Ringer. London, 1952.

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