Ernest Bramah: Complete Works gathers the remarkable range of a writer whose fiction moves with equal assurance through comic chinoiserie, detective ingenuity, political speculation, and urbane fantasy. The collection is anchored by the Kai Lung tales, with their exquisitely mock-oriental cadences and proverbial wit, and by the Max Carrados mysteries, which helped redefine detective fiction through the paradox of a blind investigator whose perception exceeds ordinary sight. Bramah's prose is polished, ironic, and ceremonious, standing at a fascinating crossroads between late-Victorian romance, Edwardian satire, and the emerging modern popular genres. Born Ernest Brammah Smith in 1868, Bramah worked in farming, journalism, and secretarial service before becoming a professional author, experiences that sharpened both his eye for social absurdity and his relish for specialized knowledge. His anonymity in life contrasts with the distinctive authority of his literary voice: elegant, amused, exacting, and quietly subversive. This volume is recommended to readers who value wit as much as plot, and style as much as invention. It offers not merely collected entertainment, but a sustained encounter with one of English fiction's most idiosyncratic craftsmen.