Skip to product information
1 of 1

Goldsboro Books

The Toff and The Kidnapped Child

The Toff and The Kidnapped Child

by John Creasey

Publisher Hodder & Stoughton

Genre:

Publication date:

Available from:

  • Unsigned
  • UK First Edition
  • First Printing
  • Hardcover


Regular price £100.00
Regular price Sale price £100.00
Sale Sold out
Rendering loop-subscriptions

Low stock

Rendering loop-subscriptions

Limited Edition Copies

View full details
  • Professionally Packed

    All of our books that have a dust wrapper are covered in clear protective, removable film and are packed professionally in bubble wrap and a box for shipping so that they reach you in perfect condition.

  • Book Condition & Notes

    A very good first edition - fine condition apart from a small tear to the bottom of the back board, in the middle of a bump to bottom of board. Some staining to top of page block. In a very good, unclipped dust jacket with some wear to corners and spine, very light chipping to top of spine. Some discoloration to the white surfaces of cover.

About the book

When Richard Rollison, alias the Toff, decides to investigate the disappearance of Eve Kane's husband he has no idea of what he is likely to uncover. Then, the daughter is kidnapped and a chilling message received with a lock of hair. Should Eve pay - she thinks she should - but have the kidnappers underestimated the Toff?

Collapsible content

About the Author

John Creasey

John Creasey was an English crime writer, who also wrote romance and western novels, and in total, wrote more than six hundred novels.


He created several characters who are now famous, such as The Toff (The Honourable Richard Rollison), Commander George Gideon of Scotland Yard, Inspector Roger West, The Baron (John Mannering), Doctor Emmanuel Cellini and Doctor Stanislaus Alexander Palfrey. The most popular of these was Gideon of Scotland Yard, who was the basis for the television series Gideon's Way and for the John Ford movie Gideon's Day. The Baron character was also made into a 1960s TV series starring Steve Forrest as The Baron.


In 1962, Creasey won an Edgar Award for Best Novel, from the Mystery Writers of America (MWA), for Gideon's Fire, written under the pseudonym J. J. Marric. In 1969 he received the MWA's greatest honour, the Grand Master Award. He served one term as president of the organization in 1966, one of only three non-American writers to be so honoured.

Collapsible content

GPSR EU Safety Information

1. Manufacturer Contact Information

Goldsboro Books Ltd - 23-27 Cecil Court, London, WC2N4EZ, enquiries@goldsborobooks.com, 02074979230

2. EU Authorised Representative Information

Easy Access System Europe - Mustamäe tee 50, 10621 Tallinn, Estonia, gpsr.requests@easproject.com

3. Safety Warnings

Not applicable

  • Why Author Curation Matters

    Why Author Curation Matters

    David H Headley

    In publishing, we talk endlessly about discovery. We analyse it, predict it, strategise it. We build campaigns around it. But every now and then, I’m reminded that discovery, at its...

    David H Headley

    Why Author Curation Matters

    In publishing, we talk endlessly about discovery. We analyse it, predict it, strategise it. We build campaigns around it. But every now and then, I’m reminded that discovery, at its...

  • The Reader Deficit

    The Reader Deficit

    David H Headley

    Philip Stone's latest NielsenIQ BookData article paints a measured picture of the UK book market. Print book sales are forecast to decline by around 2% this year, while market value...

    2 comments
    David H Headley

    The Reader Deficit

    Philip Stone's latest NielsenIQ BookData article paints a measured picture of the UK book market. Print book sales are forecast to decline by around 2% this year, while market value...

    2 comments
  • Crime Collective: August 2026 Revealed

    Crime Collective: August 2026 Revealed

    Rebecca McDonnell

    Why We Chose Split Second for August 2026 Sometimes the most gripping crime novels aren't built around impossible puzzles or serial killers lurking in the shadows. Instead, they ask a...

    Rebecca McDonnell

    Crime Collective: August 2026 Revealed

    Why We Chose Split Second for August 2026 Sometimes the most gripping crime novels aren't built around impossible puzzles or serial killers lurking in the shadows. Instead, they ask a...

  • When a Book Becomes a Film, Something Else Happens Too...

    When a Book Becomes a Film, Something Else Happ...

    David H Headley

    There is always a moment when a film or television adaptation is announced, when everything suddenly feels exciting about that book that once lived quietly on a shelf, and it...

    1 comment
    David H Headley

    When a Book Becomes a Film, Something Else Happ...

    There is always a moment when a film or television adaptation is announced, when everything suddenly feels exciting about that book that once lived quietly on a shelf, and it...

    1 comment
1 of 4