The Coin of Dionysius

The Coin of Dionysius

Title: The Coin of Dionysius
Author: Ernest Bramah
Release: 2020-08-08
Kind: audiobook
Genre: Fiction
Preview Intro
1
The Coin of Dionysius Ernest Bramah
Ernest Bramah was born on 20th March 1868. He was an intensely private man and very little about his life was ever released.
Bramah dropped out of Manchester Grammar school at sixteen, in almost all his subjects he was close to the bottom of his class, and took a job at a farm. His father then invested substantial sums in setting him up with his own farm but Bramah’s long term interests were elsewhere. In his spare time he would write vignettes on local subjects and send them to The Birmingham News for publication.

In a now rather dramatic change of career he obtained the position of secretary to Jerome K Jerome and then to editing one of Jerome’s magazines. Thereafter Bramah edited journals for a publishing firm that only ceased with its bankruptcy.

He obtained success in his own right with the creation of the storyteller Kai Lung with humourous tales set in China, usually laced with fantasy elements. There seems to have been a certain vogue for stories with an oriental element at this time which Bramah was happy to take advantage of.

His career blossomed across many genres; in humour, science-fiction, and supernatural he was ranked with the very best of the day. Even Orwell cited his work as an influence and as a predictor for the rise of Fascism and his own novel, 1984.

At a time when the English Channel had yet to be crossed by an aeroplane, Bramah foresaw aerial express trains traveling at 10,000 feet, a nationwide wireless-telegraphy network, fax machines and cypher writing typewriters similar to the German Enigma machine.

In 1914, Bramah created the blind detective Max Carrados. Despite the obvious obstacle to his deductive powers he was a literary and commercial success.

Ernest Bramah died in Weston-Super-Mare on 27th June 1942 at the age of 74.

More from Ernest Bramah

Robert Barr, Edgar Allan Poe, Julius Chambers, R. Austin Freeman, Arthur B. Reeve, Matthias McDonnel Bodkin, Jacques Futrelle, Arthur Morrison, Ernest Bramah, Louisa Pirkis, Chris Harrald & Anna Katherine Green
Ernest Bramah
Arthur Conan Doyle, G. K. Chesterton & Ernest Bramah
Ryūnosuke Akutagawa, Grant Allen, Leonid Andreyev, Mikhail Petrovich Artzybashev, Stacy Aumonier, William Austin, Richard Harris Barham, Robert Barr, Charles Baudelaire, John Davys Beresford, Ernest Bramah, Valery Bryusov, Thomas Burke, WILLIAM E. BURTON, Bernard Capes, Charles W. Chesnutt & Frederick Cowles
Ryūnosuke Akutagawa, Leonid Andreyev, Mikhail Petrovich Artzybashev, Stacy Aumonier, John Davys Beresford, Ernest Bramah, Valery Bryusov, Thomas Burke, Bernard Capes, Charles W. Chesnutt, Ulric Daubeny, Hanns Heinz Ewers, Rudolph Fisher, John Galsworthy, Vsevolod Garshin, W. L. George, Knut Hamsun, Henry Harland, W. F. Harvey, Jaroslav Hašek, Lafcadio Hearn, William Hope Hodgson, E. W. Hornung, Vicente Blasco Ibáñez, Perceval Landon, Ring Lardner & Sinclair Lewis
Arthur Conan Doyle, G. K. Chesterton & Ernest Bramah
Ernest Bramah
Ryūnosuke Akutagawa, Grant Allen, Leonid Andreyev, Mikhail Petrovich Artzybashev, Gertrude Atherton, Lady Augusta Gregory, Stacy Aumonier, William Austin, Richard Harris Barham, Robert Barr, Charles Baudelaire, Aphra Behn, John Davys Beresford, Helena Blavatsky, Marjorie Bowen, Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Ernest Bramah, D. K. Broster, Rhoda Broughton, Valery Bryusov & Thomas Burke