The Saint Around the World

The Saint Around the World is a collection of short stories by Leslie Charteris, first published in 1956 by The Crime Club in the United States and by Hodder and Stoughton in the United Kingdom in 1957. This book continues the adventures of Simon Templar, alias The Saint, and is the third of three consecutive books that take a "travelogue" approach to the stories, with each taking place in a different exotic locale; Charteris would later return to this theme with The Saint in the Sun.

The Saint Around the World
First edition (US)
AuthorLeslie Charteris
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish language
SeriesThe Saint
GenreMystery, Short Stories
PublisherThe Crime Club
Publication date
1956
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Preceded byThe Saint on the Spanish Main 
Followed byThanks to the Saint 

This book features the final regular appearance of Chief Inspector Claud Eustace Teal in the English-language Saint series (and in fact it is his first appearance in the series since 1939's The Happy Highwayman); he would appear again in one of the French pastiche novels, based upon The Saint.

Stories

The book consisted of 6 stories:

  1. Bermuda: The Patient Playboy
  2. England: The Talented Husband
  3. France: The Reluctant Nudist
  4. Middle East: The Lovelorn Sheik
  5. Malaya: The Pluperfect Lady
  6. Vancouver: The Sporting Chance

Television adaptations

Three stories from this collection formed the basis for episodes of the 1962-69 TV series, The Saint.

"The Talented Husband" has the distinction of being the very first episode of the series to be broadcast, on 4 October 1962 (thereby also making it the first Charteris story to be adapted by the series). "The Sporting Chance" appeared on 12 December 1963, during the second season. "The Reluctant Nudist" was adapted as "The Persistent Parasites" and was broadcast on 29 July 1965, as part of the fourth season.


gollark: Strings should just be byte vectors, with extra unicodey functionality and probably some invariants.
gollark: Null terminated strings bad.
gollark: I wonder if there's some kind of "reduce with early exit" functional™ thing.
gollark: > well gollark that is significantly less performant isnt itMaybe? I don't know how good the compiler is, but mostly I do not actually care.
gollark: Python = <:bees:724389994663247974>
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.