In the tradition of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories, this mystery by the author of the Winnie-the-Pooh book is set in the English countryside in a stately British mansion with an abundance of characters and curious clues.
In the tradition of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories, this mystery by the author of the Winnie-the-Pooh book is set in the English countryside in a stately British mansion with an abundance of characters and curious clues.
The mystery is fine, but the light amusement of the amateur sleuth and his enjoyment at his own cleverness in figuring it out all along the way is deftly delivered.
Antony Gillingham, humorous and astute observer of life, arrives at The Red House, the manor house of a quiet, uneventful English village, just as a fatal shot is fired, and finds himself tangled up in a mystery that requires all of his ingenuity, trained curiosity and bravery to unravel.
A lot of expository dialogue and conscious Holmes/Watson patter ('I'll put forth a cunning observation, and then you say to me 'By Jove! You are a marvel in this rum business!'" is not a misrepresentation) in this locked-room mystery. Most guests, visitors, and help are absent or rare by the fifth chapter. The denouement is slightly dissatisfying (yes, dissatisfied is the correct word here), but it is an early locked-room mystery, published in 1922.
Antony Gillingham, humorous and astute observer of life, arrives at The Red House, the manor house of a quiet, uneventful English village, just as a fatal shot is fired, and finds himself tangled up in a mystery that requires all of his ingenuity, trained curiosity and bravery to unravel.
A lot of expository dialogue and conscious Holmes/Watson patter ('I'll put forth a cunning observation, and then you say to me 'By Jove! You are a marvel in this rum business!'" is not a misrepresentation) in this locked-room mystery. Most guests, visitors, and help are absent or rare by the fifth chapter. The denouement is slightly dissatisfying (yes, dissatisfied is the correct word here), but it is an early locked-room mystery, published in 1922.