The Weird Adventures of Professor Delapine of the Sorbonne by G. Lindsay Johnson

(8 User reviews)   1502
By Abigail Petrov Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Thought Pieces
Johnson, G. Lindsay (George Lindsay), 1853-1943 Johnson, G. Lindsay (George Lindsay), 1853-1943
English
Okay, listen up. I just fell down the wildest literary rabbit hole, and I need to tell you about it. Picture this: Paris, the early 1900s. Professor Delapine isn't your average Sorbonne academic. He's a scientific genius who gets pulled into the shadowy world of the occult. When a mysterious death rocks Parisian high society, the police are stumped. But Delapine? He sees connections no one else can. This book is a bizarre and brilliant mash-up. One minute you're in a lab discussing cutting-edge (for 1910) physics, and the next, you're in a secret séance or chasing a suspect through gaslit streets. It's like Sherlock Holmes decided to study paranormal phenomena instead of tobacco ash. The central mystery is genuinely gripping—is it a clever crime, or is something truly supernatural at play? Delapine uses logic to tackle the illogical, and watching him piece it together is a total blast. If you love vintage mysteries but wish they had a dash of the strange and uncanny, this forgotten gem is calling your name. It's a time capsule of weird fiction that's surprisingly fun.
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I stumbled across this book purely by chance, and what a fantastic accident it was. Published in 1910, it feels like a direct pipeline to the pulp adventures and scientific romances of that era, but with a brainy professor at its heart.

The Story

The plot kicks off with a high-society scandal in Paris: a prominent man is found dead under impossible circumstances. The police are baffled, and whispers of occult forces begin to swirl. Enter Professor Delapine. He’s recruited to consult on the case, not for his knowledge of criminology, but for his expertise in both advanced science and the history of secret societies and psychic phenomena. The investigation becomes a thrilling chase. Delapine and his companions follow clues from glittering Parisian salons to grimy back alleys, from the halls of academia to hidden rooms where spiritualists hold their gatherings. The line between a cunning human plot and genuine supernatural events stays blurry right until the end, making every chapter a new puzzle.

Why You Should Read It

What makes this book special is Delapine himself. He’s not a magician or a psychic; he’s a rationalist confronting the irrational. He approaches a séance with the same analytical eye he’d use on a chemistry experiment. Reading his deductions is like watching a master chess player several moves ahead of everyone else. The book is also a fascinating snapshot of its time. You get the excitement about new discoveries like X-rays and radio waves, mixed with a very Edwardian fascination with spiritualism and the occult. It’s not scary, but it’s wonderfully eerie and full of ‘what if’ energy.

Final Verdict

This book is a perfect pick for readers who love classic mysteries but are looking for something off the beaten path. If you enjoy the logic of Sherlock Holmes, the adventurous spirit of Jules Verne, and the spooky atmosphere of an M.R. James ghost story, you’ll find a lot to love here. It’s also a treat for anyone interested in the history of speculative fiction. Just be ready for a story that is, in the best possible way, genuinely weird.

Lucas Taylor
1 month ago

Based on the summary, I decided to read it and the depth of research presented here is truly commendable. Truly inspiring.

Melissa Taylor
1 year ago

I stumbled upon this title and the emotional weight of the story is balanced perfectly. Exactly what I needed.

Charles Anderson
1 year ago

Compatible with my e-reader, thanks.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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