De Cock en moord bij maanlicht by A.C. Baantjer
A sect moves into a former printing works in Amsterdam. Soon after, a psychiatrist is killed on the Kalkmarkt. De Cock must find out if the two are connected.
A.C. Baantjer was a Dutch writer. He worked as a police detective in Amsterdam for almost forty years. He used that work to write the De Cock series, one of the most read crime series in the Netherlands.
A sect moves into a former printing works in Amsterdam. Soon after, a psychiatrist is killed on the Kalkmarkt. De Cock must find out if the two are connected.
De Cock and Vledder try to find the person who has murdered several women, each dressed in a red silk nightgown.
Several hardened criminals are murdered, and a line of verse by the poet Vondel seems to be linked to the killings.
An old woman vanishes on the road between Purmerend and Amsterdam, an architect is shot at three times, and an old man has also disappeared. De Cock walks into a hornets nest.
Three lawyers are found dead in the Brouwersgracht canal within a short time of each other. De Cock takes the case.
De Cock suspects a link between the murder of a young woman and the disappearance of a former colleague who had been threatened.
De Cock looks into the murder of a failed theology student who had taken up the cause of young people with few chances.
After a death notice for a notorious burglar arrives, De Cock and Vledder face a run of mysterious murders.
Two teachers are found dead on an Amsterdam car park within a short time, and an identical killing in Friesland brings De Cock into the case.
Three scientists who made a remarkable invention are murdered, and De Cock must work out who wanted them dead.
Three single men who collect antiques die of heart attacks within a short time, each found in a house that has been stripped bare.
A worker accuses his former employer of dumping poison in the Amstel, and the case grows into something far darker for De Cock.
A restaurant menu carries a full written confession to a murder, and De Cock recalls an old killing he never solved.
A young man threatens a tourist with an infected needle, and the arrest pulls De Cock into a murder tied to the fear of AIDS.
A run of nearly identical murders of young women in the first-class compartments of trains leaves De Cock without a motive or a suspect.
In the weeks before Christmas, De Cock meets his hardest murder cases. A find on the Keizersgracht grows into something far larger than he expected.
A respected member of an antiquarian society is found murdered under the Muiderpoort with a rare bronze knife in his back. De Cock and Vledder enter the closed world of the society to find the killer.
On the day an eighteen-year-old fan comes to meet him, De Cock and Vledder must search for a missing body rather than a missing killer.
A woman vanishes from a hospital, and three more turn out to be missing. De Cock follows the trail of these disappearances.
While guarding a millionaire's art treasures, De Cock and Vledder are called to the murder of a young man chained to a radiator. That same night a valuable silver jug is stolen from the exhibition.
A funeral in Amsterdam for a criminal killed in Antwerp opens an international case. De Cock spots a mourner he knows has been dead for two years.
What looks like a narcotics matter turns into a string of sinister murders. De Cock and Vledder are pulled deeper into a case than ever before.
A woman finds her company director dead in his chair, but when she returns the body has vanished. De Cock and Vledder must work out whether she really saw what she thinks she saw.
A clown is found stabbed to death at the foot of the Schreierstoren, and a collection of antique jewels has been stolen. De Cock must work out whether the two crimes are connected.
De Cock investigates the murders of two former drug users and the woman who ran their boarding house. Music seems to link the killings, and it draws him to a concert at the Amsterdam Concertgebouw.