About Us

About Us

关于我们

Overseas Chinese Press Inc is an comprehensive of bilingual publisher in New York, Includes the following imprints: Overseas Chinese Press, World Books Publishing, China Culture Press, World Science Publishing House, Empyrean Literature Publishing, etc. We are mainly publishes Literature, Arts, Biography, Lifestyle, Psychology and inspiration, Language, Academic research Works, publishes more than 500 Books a year. The language of publication is in English, Chinese and bilingual. ISBN allocation is relatively flexible, It can be submitted and approved at the same time. About 2-3 days give it to you. You need to Provide 5 copies of sample books within 60 days, and Cover file. Convenient us to register the book number, and in our website and Bookwire database query. Due to the needs of business development, we are now looking for regional agents for external cooperation.

Book Detail

Book Detail

Books

The Nile Incident: Solving the Mystery
The Nile Incident: Solving the Mystery
Author: Jing Guo
Subjects: Fiction_general
Languages: English
Publication Date: January 2024
Book Format: E-Book / PDF
Dimensions(cm): 29.7/21.5/**
Pages: 429
Weight: 1.79 MB
Imprint: Overseas Chinese Press
ISBN: 979-8-88874-350-8
List Price:
$0.99
Description


About Author


Jing Guo was once a senior lawyer who transformed into a detective fiction writer due to his fascination with crime. Her works are full of legal knowledge and precise reasoning, as well as profound insights into human nature.


Book Description


The millionaire heiress, Lynette, was found shot in the head aboard her honeymoon yacht, her prized £50,000 pearl necklace missing—a clear indication of a premeditated murder for financial gain. As Poirot searched for clues, Lynette's maid, Louise Bourget, was also found murdered in the room, clutching a torn corner of a 1,000-franc note, suggesting she had uncovered the killer and attempted blackmail, only to meet her demise.

Fortunately, Mrs. Otterbourne was the sole eyewitness to the murder. However, just as she was about to reveal the identity of the murderer, she was shot dead by a bullet from outside the window. In the end, Detective Poirot unraveled the intricate web of clues, including seemingly insignificant details like the consumption of drugged wine on the night of the murder, a shawl with bullet holes found in the Nile, a nail polish bottle stained with red ink on Lynette's vanity, and the capital letter "J" written on the wall in blood.

Carefully piecing together these seemingly unrelated and convoluted clues, Poirot deduced that it was Jacqueline and Simon who conspired to murder Lynette. This unexpected twist leaves readers astonished at the unraveling of the mystery. As with many detective novels, the story concludes with the true culprits, Jacqueline and Simon, taking their own lives.