Porcelain Ming Cat (1946)
The Bulldog Drummond stories followed Captain Hugh "Bulldog"  Drummond, D.S.O., M.C., a wealthy former WWI officer of the fictional  Loamshire Regiment, who, after the war, spends his new-found leisure  time as a private detective. Drummond is a proto-James Bond figure and a  version of the imperial adventurers depicted by the likes of John  Buchan. In terms of the detective genre, the first Bulldog Drummond  novel was published after the Sherlock Holmes stories, the Nayland  Smith/Fu Manchu novels and Richard Hannay's first three adventures  including The Thirty-Nine Steps. The character first appeared in the  novel Bulldog Drummond (1920), and this was followed by a lengthy series  of books and adaptations for films, radio and television. "Drummond...  has the appearance of an English gentleman: a man who fights hard, plays  hard and lives clean... His best friend would not call him good-looking  but he possess that cheerful type of ugliness which inspires immediate  confidence ... Only his eyes redeem his face. Deep-set and steady, with  eyelashes that many women envy, they show him to be a sportsman and an  adventurer. Drummond goes outside the law when he feels the ends justify  the means." The opening of the radio show starts with a the sounds of  footsteps, foghorn, then two shots ring out, followed by three blows of a  police officer's whistle. Bulldog was a methodical crime-solving sleuth  who let nothing get in his way of his goal, which was to put a stop to  crime! Bulldog believed in uncomplicated and decisive means of getting  his way with the lords of the underworld. This usually led to their  swift capture, and the easing of the city's burden brought about by  these ruthless thugs.

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