Up the Garden Path (novel)

Up the Garden Path is a 1949 detective novel by John Rhode, the pen name of the British writer Cecil Street. It is the forty ninth in his long-running series of novels featuring Lancelot Priestley, a Golden Age armchair detective. It was published in America by Dodd Mead under the alternative title The Fatal Garden. Reviewing the novel in The Observer, Maurice Richardson concluded "Mr. Rhode has lost very little of his grip."

Synopsis
Two corpses are found in the garden of the house of an eccentric inventor Gabriel Hockliffe. Unusually Priestley takes an active role in the investigation rather than solving it from a detached distance.