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5 Reviews
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
What the Dickens!?!?,
By
This review is from: The D. Case: Or The Truth About The Mystery Of Edwin Drood (Paperback)
In this book, a group of fictional detectives (mostly famous, but with a few obscure ones) are assembled in Rome to solve "The Mystery of Edwin Dood". "The Mystery of Edwin Drood" was Charles Dickens' last book, which he died before completing. This book reprints "Drood" in it's unfinished entirety, interupted periodically by the detectives discussing the "case". I found the book (both "Drood" and the new bits with Sherlock Holmes and company) to be quite entertaining. Does the book provide a "definitive" sollution to "The Mystery of Edwin Drood"? No, but it's an imaginative sollution that is plausible. Dickens fans should enjoy this book.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A chance to re-read Edwin Drood,
By rs "RaviSankrit" (Baltimore) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The D. Case: Or The Truth About The Mystery Of Edwin Drood (Paperback)
The Mystery of Edwin Drood is Dickens' last (unfinished) novel and his best, excepting Pickwick Papers. With a wonderful array of characters, including the minor ones like Honeythunder and the incomparable (outside of Dickens' works) Deputy it is a pleasure to read and re-read. By itself of course a 5-star book! The D case has fictional detectives gathered in Rome, attending a conference where the aim is to "finish" the mystery story. The authors' solution is witty and interesting. However, much of the story is dated because it is poking fun at whizz-bang Japanese technology. Furthermore most of the detectives are not well portrayed (at least in the English translation). All in all an enjoyable book, by itself 3-star.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Surprise Twist Ending,
By Jackie Lee "raised by wolves" (Sunny Southern California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The D. Case: Or The Truth About The Mystery Of Edwin Drood (Paperback)
An archly amusing presentation of several possible theories of the solution to Dickens' unfinished "Mystery of Edwin Drood". Here you can read the unfinished novel, interspersed with a discussion of the story by numerous fictional detectives. As a previous reviewer stated, no definitive conclusions are reached. There is, however, a surprise ending as the assembled fictional detectives reach a consensus about Dickens' real life death.
I personally have a totally different take on the conclusion of the fictional story.
4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Mystery of Edwin Drood,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The D. Case: Or The Truth About The Mystery Of Edwin Drood (Paperback)
The Mystery of Edwin Drood is a wonderful book. The last book of Charles Dickens' work. He wrote this book before he died but never ended it because he died before he did. This book is a very educational, and hard book to read, but it's really worth it. I strongly recommend you to read this.
0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
3 stars for the Dickens, 4 stars for the Fruttero/Lucentini,
By Sven Allenbach-Schmidt (Greenbelt, MD USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The D. Case: The Truth About the Mystery of Edwin Drood (Hardcover)
A rather interesting book, "The D Case" contains the incomplete manuscript of Charles Dickens' "The Mystery of Edwin Drood" interleaved with Fruttero & Lucentini's fictionalized examination of what the solution to the unsolved mystery is. "Edwin Drood" was Dickens' last, and probably weakest novel. It just isn't a very interesting read. Read it alone, and you probably won't care what happened to Edwin Drood. What F & L do is cover all the various ideas scholars have had over 'whodunnit', by putting the arguments in the mouths of all the great fictional sleuths of the last 100 years+ working as a team. A much more interesting way to follow the discussion about the book than reading formal articles in Lit Journals. In the end, F & L's detectives present a new and interesting solution to the title crime, and in addition, reveal a new crime no one suspected, the murder of Dickens himself, along with the culprit! Sound farfetched? Try it, you'll like it.The reason I don't give this 5 stars is the poor depiction of the fictional dectectives. With the exception of Hercule Poirot, none of them talk like they did in the orginal works they appeared in. Whether this is the fault of F & L, or the fault of the translator, I don't know. Regardless, it weakens the book. |
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The D. Case: Or The Truth About The Mystery Of Edwin Drood by Carlo Fruttero (Paperback - October 15, 1993)
$39.95 $28.00
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