Inspector Bill Mercer: Difference between revisions

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'''Inspector Bill Mercer''' is a detective created by the British crime and mystery writer [[Michael Gilbert]]. He is the leading character in the 1972 novel [[The Body of a Girl]] and appears later in at least three short stories. On the first page of the novel "Detective Inspector William Mercer received... confirmation of his promotion to chief inspector and his appointment in charge of the CID at Stoneferry on Thames, which is one of the larger upriver stations of Q Division of the Metropolitan Police."
<blockquote>He was a man in his late twenties or early thirties, with a lot of dark hair, worn rather long,, and a thick, sensual face. His appearance was not improved by a puckered white scar which started at the cheekbone and gathered up the corner of the left eye so that it seemed permanently half closed. He had thick shoulders, a barrel of a chest, and legs disproportionately long for such a body. <ref>[[The Body of a Girl]], Harper & Row, New York, 1972, page 7</ref></blockquote>

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Inspector Bill Mercer is a detective created by the British crime and mystery writer Michael Gilbert. He is the leading character in the 1972 novel The Body of a Girl and appears later in at least three short stories. On the first page of the novel "Detective Inspector William Mercer received... confirmation of his promotion to chief inspector and his appointment in charge of the CID at Stoneferry on Thames, which is one of the larger upriver stations of Q Division of the Metropolitan Police."

He was a man in his late twenties or early thirties, with a lot of dark hair, worn rather long,, and a thick, sensual face. His appearance was not improved by a puckered white scar which started at the cheekbone and gathered up the corner of the left eye so that it seemed permanently half closed. He had thick shoulders, a barrel of a chest, and legs disproportionately long for such a body. [1]

  1. The Body of a Girl, Harper & Row, New York, 1972, page 7