The publication of a new novel by James Hadley Chase has now become an event not only in England but in all countries in Europe and as far east as Japan.
I Would Rather Stay Poor is the 52nd novel to have been written by this author, who has been described by the London Star critic as “the most remarkable among British and American thriller writers.”
The story is of a payroll robbery executed with cunning and ingenuity by an unsuccessful bank official. The suspense, as in all Chase novels, is continuous. The women, as in all Chase novels, are larger than life. The reader, as in all Chase novels, is hooked from the first line to the last.
Description:
The publication of a new novel by James Hadley Chase has now become an event not only in England but in all countries in Europe and as far east as Japan. I Would Rather Stay Poor is the 52nd novel to have been written by this author, who has been described by the London Star critic as “the most remarkable among British and American thriller writers.” The story is of a payroll robbery executed with cunning and ingenuity by an unsuccessful bank official. The suspense, as in all Chase novels, is continuous. The women, as in all Chase novels, are larger than life. The reader, as in all Chase novels, is hooked from the first line to the last.