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The Missing Chapter [Hardcover]

Robert Goldsborough (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

December 1, 1993
Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin return to investigate the suspicious apparent suicide of an irritable writer who was hired to continue a popular mystery series, in a case full of jealousy, ambition, and deadly extortion.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Life imitates art imitates life. In his seventh Nero Wolfe/Archie Goodwin caper, the writer responsible for continuing the noted series after the death of originator Rex Stout plots a case around the corpse of an author who has continued a mystery series after the original writer's demise. A publisher hires Wolfe and Goodwin to investigate the death, labeled a suicide, of Charles Childress, an ill-tempered author who had recently angered several people, including his agent, his editor and the possibly corrupt reviewer who had lambasted the latest Childress novel. Yet for all that, Childress also had a pretty fiancee, a loyal friend in a fellow author and the devotion of many fans. Goldsborough carefully draws Wolfe and company into the '90s (computers figure in the plot and hold records of Wolfe's beloved orchids), yet the corpulent sleuth still abandons himself to Fritz Brenner's high-fat meals. As always, Archie does the legwork, which in this instance takes him to rural Indiana, Childress's home state, to unearth secrets that Wolfe pieces together in an assured and effective conclusion. Goldsborough ( Fade to Black ) may not recruit new fans to the anachronistic and bulky Wolfe, but he's likely to satisfy the old Rex Stout faithful.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Goldsborough's seventh Nero Wolfe novel is both a very clever mystery and a sort of insider's joke on the whole idea of one author continuing a mystery series after the original author dies. Charles Childress was the author chosen to continue the Orville Barnstable mystery series after the originator died. When Childress is found dead in his Greenwich Village apartment, the police say suicide. His publisher and editor, Horace Vinson, disagrees and hires his Hugeness, Nero Wolfe, to investigate. Among the suspects questioned by leg man Archie Goodwin are a fired agent, an angry editor, and a snippy critic. Goldsborough, as the "continuator" of Rex Stout's Wolfe series, delights in poking fun at the continuation phenomenon--the readers who delight in pointing out small errors of trivial detail in the continuator's work; the cacophony of critical voices, some hailing Childress as a worthy successor, some denouncing him as a greedy vulture; the editors who tinker needlessly; the publishers who exploit Childress in order to boost sales of the dead author's reprints. The publishing details ring true, and--as always--Goldsborough does a masterly job with the Wolfe legacy. Here's a continuator with no reason to kill himself or to be killed. Wes Lukowsky

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 229 pages
  • Publisher: Bantam; First edition (December 1, 1993)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0553072412
  • ISBN-13: 978-0553072419
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.5 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #810,227 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The best of the Goldsborough Nero Wolfe, October 5, 2000
By 
This review is from: The Missing Chapter (Hardcover)
This book seems to be written in response to people who were unhappy with Goldsborough's taking on the continuation of the Nero Wolfe series. This mystery deals with the death of a writer, disliked by many, who takes on the tales of an eccentric small town detective. Filled with possible suspects, this book also serves to let Goldsborough take some shots at many targets. Interfering editors, vindictive critics, inept agents, and nerdy fans who worry about minutia are all fair game. I'm not sure if this was Goldsborough's last Wolfe mystery but if it was he went out with a bang.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining, but undercut by various weak points, November 3, 2002
By 
Michele L. Worley (Kingdom of the Mouse, United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Missing Chapter (Hardcover)
I wavered between 2 and 3 stars in rating this book, deciding on the latter because it's reasonably entertaining.

Goldsborough succeeds in quickly capturing readers' attention - the victim's role is filled by an author in a situation somewhat resembling Goldsborough's own. Charles Childress, selected by Horace Vinson - Monarch Press' editor-in-chief - some years before the story opens, had continued the long-running series of Sgt. Barnstable mysteries after the death of their creator, Darius Sawyer. Childress' death in his Village apartment, shot by his own gun, has been closed as a suicide. Vinson disbelieves the suicide theory, and his attempts to persuade the investigating officer - Rowcliff - got nowhere, so he has come to the brownstone seeking to hire Wolfe.

Vinson had been Childress's mentor to some extent. He supported Childress in a conflict with his mystery editor, Keith Billings, losing Billings in the process - but he's known to invariably side with authors against editors. Frankly, neither Vinson's relationship with Childress nor his willingness to foot Wolfe's large bill is properly explored - neither Vinson nor Monarch appears to have a stake. Firms hiring Wolfe in the past have done so to avert major publicity disasters, but that doesn't appear to be in the offing here - and unlike previous such cases, the distinction between Vinson as individual and Monarch as a firm isn't clarified in hiring Wolfe.

Another point not fully countered is the strength of the case for suicide - any murderer would have a sporting chance of acquittal. Childress was 'moody' - being not only hot-tempered and ungrateful, but with at least one prior suicide attempt. He had an inflated and unjustified opinion of his abilities as a writer, and reacted very violently to both open and implied criticism - as evidenced by his vitriolic attacks on the Gazette's literary critic, Walter Hobbs, on his own agent, Franklin Ott, and on Monarch's mystery editor, Keith Billings.

Hobbs had blasted Childress, particularly in the area of weak plotting, and Childress responded with a libelous counterattack - and Hobbs wouldn't sue. Hobbs has a bad reputation in the New York literary world - that his favorable reviews are only services rendered - but Goldsborough doesn't properly shore up this thread with detailed information. Hobbs' first meeting with Wolfe is disappointing, given the buildup.

In another poison-pen essay, Childress had savaged both his ex-agent and ex-editor - but not by name - affecting both their reputations, since the attack was in a professional publication. Ott's efforts on his client's behalf didn't satisfy Childress- receiving a 15% rather than 80% increase on his next contract, not bad for something even Vinson says would never have made the bestseller lists. How badly was Ott's business affected by Childress' attacks? The clash with Billings appears more personal, since Billings demanded substantial revision of Childress' work, particularly in shoring up what he claims were serious weaknesses in plot construction.

In Childress' personal life, he was engaged to Debra Mitchell, a chat show personality immediately pegged by Archie as bossy and micromanaging (on insufficient evidence). She accuses Patricia Royce of murdering Childress out of thwarted desire. Royce, who wrote in a different genre, claims to have had only a platonic mutual-aid relationship with Childress, and says that his relationship with Mitchell was near its end. Childress' attraction for women is never made comprehensible.

Wolfe takes the case, not because he has a rational case for murder, but because Cramer riles him in an offstage confrontation with him, while Archie's performing the initial legwork. Cramer's merry men appear on stage only during the final showdown, in fact. Saul has a role - and even a decent speaking part at Wolfe's dinner table, a rarity - but Fred does not appear. Lily appears on stage briefly, offering a suggestion that possibly *everybody* was in on it. As one of the more amusing subplots, the brownstone's now-ancient elevator kicks the bucket (good for some comic relief, and allowing Goldsborough to disrupt Wolfe's schedule).

Archie's financial worries appear to be a continuity error, given the situation at the beginning of Goldsborough's first Wolfe novel, _Murder in E Minor_. The dialogue has rough patches in characterization, for both Archie and Wolfe. On at least 3 occasions, Archie or Wolfe forms a conclusion about another character that doesn't follow from the evidence. Wolfe begins reading some of Childress' work, but (inconsistent with his actions in, say, _Plot It Yourself_) isn't shown reading the works of other relevant figures in the case. In general, Wolfe and the gang leave a number of unexplored avenues, without apparent justification.

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Missing Chapter by Robert Goldsborough, May 2, 2009
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This review is from: The Missing Chapter (Hardcover)
A very nice little book and a nice imitation of Rex Stout. The story line is an ironic play on itself.
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