Inspector French Books in Order
Part ofFreeman Wills Crofts Books in OrderSee the Inspector French books by Freeman Wills Crofts in order, with plot summaries, reading order notes, series background, and where to start.
Last updated: July 3, 2026
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases (at no extra cost to you).
Publication Order
30 books
Inspector French’s Greatest Case
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1924
A clerk is found dead after a diamond merchant’s safe is robbed in Hatton Garden, and Inspector French gets his first major case. The hunt sends him across England and Europe in pursuit of disguise, stolen gems, and one last shock.
Inspector French and the Cheyne Mystery
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1926
Maxwell Cheyne is drugged in a Plymouth hotel, then later lured onto a ship by people desperate to recover an old letter. When the threats escalate to kidnapping and attempted murder, Inspector French takes up the chase.
Inspector French and the Starvel Hollow Tragedy
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1927
A Yorkshire house fire kills three people and at first looks like a terrible accident. Inspector French soon finds arson, murder, and even body snatching woven together in a case that keeps changing shape.
Inspector French and the Sea Mystery
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1928
A fisherman on the South Wales coast discovers a crate containing a battered corpse, and the sea refuses to give up its secrets easily. French uses tides, routes, and patient legwork to trace the case back to Devon.
The Box Office Murders
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1929
When several cinema box office cashiers die in suspicious circumstances, French is pulled into a nasty case with little obvious logic behind it. The pattern suggests a larger scheme, but finding the motive is the hardest part.
Inspector French and Sir John Magill’s Last Journey
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1930
Sir John Magill disappears after setting out on a journey tied to a promising new textile idea for the Irish linen trade. French follows trains, boats, and false assumptions to prove that Magill’s last trip was a murder plot from the start.
Mystery in the Channel
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1931
A cross-Channel ferry finds a drifting yacht with two shot men aboard, and the dead turn out to be directors of a collapsing City firm. French must untangle financial panic, vanished associates, diamonds, and a killer with a strong alibi.
Death on the Way
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1932
A young engineer is run over during railway works on the Dorset coast, and the death is first treated as an accident. French quickly finds fraud beneath the surface, then discovers the cover-up has claimed more than one victim.
Sudden Death
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1932
Out-of-work Anne Day lands a comfortable housekeeping post in Kent, but the household’s calm is badly misleading. When death strikes and the obvious suspect is arrested, Anne and Inspector French begin to think the real danger is still inside the house.
The Hog's Back Mystery
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1933
At a lonely Surrey cottage, Dr. James Earle seems to vanish from his own study without a trace. Inspector French follows the disappearance into a case of shifting loyalties, more vanishings, and multiple murders.
Mystery on Southampton Water
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1934
Two men steal a rival cement formula and accidentally kill the night watchman who catches them in the act. They think their alibis are secure, until blackmail and a fatal explosion on Southampton Water bring French into the case.
The 12.30 from Croydon
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1934
Charles Swinburn thinks killing his wealthy uncle will save his business and clear the way to the life he wants. Then the death happens on the 12.30 flight from Croydon, and a blackmailer turns one crime into a far more dangerous mess.
Crime at Guildford
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1935
An accountant from a struggling jewellers is murdered during a meeting at the managing director’s house near Guildford. At the same time, the firm’s London offices are robbed, giving French two linked crimes and no easy answer.
Man Overboard
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1936
A valuable new fuel process makes several people very interested in one man’s movements on the Northern Irish coast. When someone disappears from a boat, French has to decide whether he is facing suicide, theft, or a carefully staged killing.
The Loss of the Jane Vosper
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1936
A cargo ship bound for South America is abandoned after a series of unexplained explosions. When an insurance investigator disappears while looking into the sinking, Inspector French follows the trail from factory floor to explosives theft and murder.
Found Floating
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1937
A family takes a Mediterranean cruise in hopes of easing strain at home, but the voyage ends in murder and a body found under baffling circumstances. French must untangle shipboard routine, damaged relationships, and clues the sea keeps shifting.
Antidote to Venom
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1938
George Surridge, a zoo director in money trouble and trapped in an unhappy marriage, starts planning a murder that seems impossibly clever. Inspector French is less interested in who did it than in how the trick was managed.
The End of Andrew Harrison
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1938
Few people mourn ruthless financier Andrew Harrison when he is found dead on his houseboat at Henley. The trouble is that what looks like suicide makes less and less sense once Inspector French starts asking questions.
Fatal Venture
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1939
A new cruise business sounds like the chance of a lifetime, especially once offshore gambling enters the plan. But big money draws big risks, and Inspector French is left to pick through ambition, blackmail, and a deadly venture.
Golden Ashes
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1940
Widowed Betty Stanton takes a housekeeping job at Forde Manor just as the estate is being cleared out for sale. Then fire tears through the house, the art collection is threatened, and a dead expert gives French far more to investigate.
A Losing Game
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1941
A blackmailing moneylender is murdered and his cottage burned, and a detective novelist soon finds himself under suspicion. French digs into debt, old grudges, and a buried secret that reaches back to Australia.
James Tarrant, Adventurer
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1941
James Tarrant builds a fortune by pushing dubious indigestion remedies, using charm and other people’s money to get ahead. When he dies after a fishing trip, the obvious suspect may be far too obvious for French.
Fear Comes to Chalfont
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1942
Richard Elton is killed at his Surrey property, where a marriage of convenience and a dangerous love affair have reached breaking point. French arrives with a young sergeant and patiently sorts through motive, money, and lies.
The Affair at Little Wokeham
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1943
In the quiet village of Little Wokeham, a respectable man is drawn into a crime that first looks manageable and then anything but. Inspector French has to work through guilt, deception, and a plan that was never as safe as it seemed.
Enemy Unseen
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1945
In wartime Cornwall, stolen Home Guard grenades are soon followed by a wealthy man’s violent death on the beach. French is called in to investigate quietly before the case becomes a public embarrassment.
Death of a Train
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1946
During the war, a ring of German agents plans to derail a train carrying vital supplies. One mistake changes the target, and Inspector French races to hunt down the saboteurs before they vanish for good.
Silence for the Murderer
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1949
Ex-soldier Frank Roscoe thinks a shabby little swindle will change his fortunes when he takes a job with a wealthy invalid. But when the old man dies, suspicion, inheritance hopes, and Dulcie Heath’s doubts turn the scheme poisonous.
Dark Journey / French Strikes Oil
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1951
Oil has been discovered on the Vale family estate, promising riches for some and ruin for others. When Maurice Vale is murdered, French faces inheritance motives, family conflict, and two odd gloves left by the body.
Many a Slip
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1955
This short story collection brings together brisk puzzles, several Inspector French cases, and the kind of tiny blunders Crofts loved to punish. Trains, poison, blackmail, and domestic deceit all turn on one missed detail.
Anything to Declare?
by Freeman Wills Crofts
1957
A seemingly foolproof get-rich-quick scheme promises easy money for a group of restless young men. Instead it pulls them into blackmail and murder, leaving Inspector French to separate bold plans from fatal mistakes.
Series background & context
Inspector Joseph French is a Scotland Yard detective, but he is not built like a stage magician. He does not sweep into a room and stun everyone with one speech. He listens, checks, measures, and goes back over the ground. Again. That steady, practical style is the real signature of the series, and it is why the books feel so different from many other Golden Age mysteries.
The series begins with Inspector French’s Greatest Case, where a Hatton Garden diamond robbery and murder send French across England and the Continent. From there, Crofts keeps widening the map. Some books move through London offices and country houses, others head to railway lines, ferries, cargo ships, coastal towns, or small villages where one odd detail refuses to fit. Titles like Inspector French and the Cheyne Mystery, Inspector French and the Sea Mystery, and Mystery in the Channel show how much Crofts loved transport, timing, and movement.
French works for readers who enjoy process.
A lot of the tension comes from apparently solid alibis. Crofts liked to build crimes around train times, tide tables, business routines, shipping records, and the exact number of minutes it takes to get from one place to another. French breaks those cases open piece by piece. Sometimes he is proving a murder hidden inside what looks like an accident or suicide. Sometimes, as in The 12.30 from Croydon or Antidote to Venom, the reader knows early on who did it, and the pleasure comes from watching French discover how the trick was done.
The books are varied, but they share a grounded feel. Crofts cared about money worries, fraud, property deals, patents, family resentments, and the small everyday pressures that push people toward terrible choices. Even when the setup is dramatic, such as arson, shipboard murder, or wartime sabotage, the storytelling stays close to practical detail. French himself remains courteous, patient, and very hard to shake. Over the course of the series he rises in rank, but he never stops being the man who wins by doing the work.
There is not much melodrama in his private life, and that is part of the charm.
Because of that, these novels do not depend on a big emotional arc from book to book. Most cases stand alone perfectly well. Still, reading them in order lets you watch French’s career move forward and see Crofts try different puzzle shapes, from straight police investigations to inverted mysteries and travel-heavy thrillers. If you like detective fiction where the clues matter, the setting matters, and the answer has to survive close inspection, Inspector French is very good company.
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.














































Comments
Did we miss something? Have feedback?
Help us improve this page by sharing your thoughts