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The Second Confession [Mass Market Paperback]

Rex Todhunter Stout (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback
  • Publisher: Bantam Books; Mass Paperback Edition edition (1975)
  • ASIN: B000ON2CC2
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)

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Customer Reviews

20 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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19 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Second Confrontation, July 14, 2001
By 
George R Dekle "Bob Dekle" (Lake City, FL United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
Nero Wolfe's favorite drink, beer, is not a beverage you can come to like on the first taste. You will find beer bitter and repugnant, but if you keep at it you will eventually begin to tolerate it, then to like it. So it is with Nero Wolfe. At first taste you will find him arrogant, eccentric, and thoroughly unlikeable. Keep at him. Because Rex Stout chose the novella as the format for most Wolfe stories you can read the stories at a sitting. After three novellas you will come to tolerate the corpulent crimefighter. After five, you will even come to have some affection for him.

"The Second Confession" might better be named "The Second Confrontation," because Wolfe faces his archnemesis, Arnold Zeck, for the second time. ("And be a Villain" chronicled the first confrontation). When Sherlock Holmes discovered the existence of Professor Moriarty, he immediately undertook to destroy the professor's criminal empire. When Nero Wolfe discovered the existence of Arnold Zeck, he immediately began to avoid Zeck at all costs. Holmes' course of action led to the Reichenbach Falls. Wolfe's led -- you'll have to find out in the final novella of the trilogy, "In the Best Families." Suffice it to say that Wolfe undertakes to expose a communist, runs afoul of Arnold Zeck, gets his orchids machine-gunned, and winds up trying to solve a murder for Zeck. Along the way Archie gets in deep trouble with the local constabulary, Wolfe confounds the police, the two manage to outright break several laws, and they severely bend a few more.

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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining, February 10, 2003
I don't understand the reviewers who complain about loose ends. Do you normally expect the second book in a trilogy to wrap everything up? I'm guessing that those reviewers didn't realize that Zeck appears in three books (And Be a Villain, The Second Confession, and In the Best of Families, in that order). At any rate, any ends left loose in this book are tied up in the third.

But even if you know and care nothing about Zeck, you should still be able to enjoy this books; he does not dominate it. Wolfe and Archie are both in top form, and the ploy Wolfe uses to expose the murder is both enjoyable and clever.

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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Cut Rex Some Slack..., September 6, 2005
By 
John P Bernat (Kingsport, TN USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
Some of the reviews here disparage Rex Stout's "pandering" to the Red Menace thinking of 1949. Let's put this into perspective...

Long before it was fashionable or even easy to represent for civil rights, Rex had Nero Wolfe honoring people of all races. Nero never generalized about (we'd now use the term "stereotyped") people with one key exception: Rex, a devoted husband and father of women, had Nero suspecting and disparaging women as flighty, treacherous and dangerous.

So here Nero accepts a commission to prove that Louis Rony is a Communist. In all truth, the way this is treated in the story Nero might as well have been asked to prove Rony was a philatelist. It's a matter for factual establishment or disestablishment...

To place this book's purported view of Communism as outweighing Stout's lifelong commitment to freedom of speech and expression is illogical.

And, please, don't forget how this book ends. That, too, puts things into an important perspective.
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