9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Operation Payroll, a.k.a. the Cheney Boone case, June 13, 2005
"Our literature needs some revision. For example, 'dead men tell no tales.' Mr. Boone is dead. Mr. Boone is silent. But he speaks."
- Wolfe to Archie, herein
As with all of Stout's Wolfe mysteries, the setting is contemporary with the time of its writing - in this case, 26 March - 6 April 1946, making it a period piece today. This was the first new Wolfe novel since 1939, all the war years cases having been told as short stories. Archie's wartime stint in Army intelligence (which assigned him right back to Wolfe) has been over for months, and Wolfe is just getting back into private practice.
Operation Payroll is about to begin: the first case in which Wolfe actively seeks new business. (The next, in AND BE A VILLAIN, soured him on the tactic for years to come.)
Cheney Boone, head of the Bureau of Price Regulation, was scheduled as guest speaker at a bash thrown by the National Industrial Association, but for him, the bash featured a monkey wrench to the head (a prop brought along for his talk). Since the BPR and the NIA are arch-enemies, and the NIA have a reputation as rich creeps, the NIA's members have been condemned as murderers at the bar of public opinion.
They're *eager* to hire Wolfe to clean up the mess.
As usual when Wolfe's client is a corporate entity - initially, at least, the NIA, who are worth billions *and* suffering the worst PR in history - are not interested in catching a killer, but in getting bad publicity under control, resulting in a certain conflict of interest. The employees of the BPR, on the other hand, are convinced that Wolfe's been hired to clean up the mess, not uncover the truth about their chief's death.
The case soon narrows to a hunt for a set of recordings of dictation given by Boone to his confidential assistant, Phoebe Gunther, who made them disappear. Far from being crooked, she's actually very much like Archie; she's determined to see her boss' arch-enemies publicly ruined by his death, and is willing to run the risk of concealing the location of the crucial cylinder revealing the key information identifying Boone's killer.
This is a very cool case.
- Archie's very much attracted to Phoebe, who turns the tables by treating *him* with the same kind of humour that serves as his best defence mechanism in conversation.
- In the public hue-and-cry over the Boone murder, Cramer is relieved of command in favour of an unspeakably obnoxious replacement from Queens.
- Wolfe fakes a nervous breakdown, with Doc Vollmer's cooperation.
The A&E adaptation with Maury Chaykin as Wolfe is faithful to the story. The corresponding Bantam paperback edition has an afterword consisting of an exchange of letters between Stout and his publisher about recycling the metal of the printing plates used for three of his earlier books due to the wartime shortage of metal.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
AN EXUBERANT READING, April 24, 2002
Nero Wolfe is surely one of the most beloved and fully imagined fictional detectives to be found. So, it is with great enthusiasm that I can now turn to a favorite story in audio book form. Michael Prichard, who was named one of Smart Money's Top Ten Golden Voices, gives an exuberant reading, adding another dimension to Archie Goodwin, Wolfe's aide.
Fans will remember that with "The Silent Speaker" Wolfe is, to say the least, in need of cash. Therefore, when a government honcho doesn't show up for a scheduled speech but instead shows up dead Wolfe is soon on the prowl. With the sometimes able assistance of the fey Archie the pair uncover a feud and a murderer. How they do it is a reminder of the narrative skills of Rex Stout.
- Gail Cooke
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