The Black Camel
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Categories: 1929 novels | Charlie Chan novels | Films based on mystery books | Black and white films | 1931 films | Mystery films | American films | English-language films | Mystery novel stubs
The Black Camel (1929) is the fourth of the Charlie Chan novels by Earl Derr Biggers.
Plot summaryIt tells the story of a Hollywood star, shooting a film on location in Hawaii, who is murdered during her stay. The story behind her murder is linked with the three-year-old murder of another Hollywood actor and also connected with an enigmatic psychic named Tarneverro. Chan, in his position as a detective with the Honolulu Police Department, "investigates amid public clamor demanding that the murderer be found and punished immediately. "Death is the black camel that kneels unbidden at every gate," Chan tells the suspects."[1] Film, TV or theatrical adaptationsIt was adapted into a film of the same name based on the book and made in 1931. This was the second of a series of sixteen Chan films to feature Warner Oland as the sleuth. External links
References
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||


