1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
GOOD BUT NOT GOOD ENOUGH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!, June 26, 2005
Ellery Queen is the master of the logical whodunit where fairplay and clues are a must. In this novel there are two major flaws. First the book should have been a short story or a novella at the most. The story is dragged and the clues are spaced after the interval of two or three chapters when they could have been given sooner. Second there are only two startling facts about the deductions in the book otherwise it's quite simple nothing complex. Not entirely bad but it could have been better. The killer is easy to guess too.Good as a short story nothing for a full length novel. Still the final explanation is well done. Not amongst his best books but worth a try.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Spanish Cape Mystery - Another Superbly Crafted Story, March 31, 2003
This review is from: Spanish Cape Mystery (Paperback)
As I write this book review, I am still excited at having solved this mystery, not simply by guessing, but largely through careful deduction. My reasoning was not entirely flawless, nor as systematic and precise and complete as the final explanation by Ellery Queen, but it was sufficiently exacting to warrant some self-praise. I did take the author's suggestion and set the book aside for several hours and wrestled with the conundrum before looking at the final chapter.
The Spanish Cape Mystery is classic Ellery Queen: a superbly crafted mystery with intriguing characters, a rather remarkable setting, and a concluding exercise in impeccable logic. The title refers to both the fictional setting, a small rocky peninsula on the New England coast, and a key element in the mystery, a rather flamboyant item of dress.
Ellery Queen mysteries are entertainingly written, but are not as literate as works by P. D. James or Colin Dexter. However, as his fans have come to expect, Ellery does sprinkle his conversation with literary and poetic quotations. Look for Voltaire, Bacon, Keats, Coleridge, La Rochefoucauld, Germaine de Stael, and William Collins in The Spanish Cape Mystery. We also occasionally meet examples of Ellery's vocabulary excesses like natatorial habits and prestidigitating deductions.
Although The Spanish Cape Mystery was first published in 1935, it has been reprinted many times, and a paperback version is readily available through Amazon.com. Apparently, The Spanish Cape Mystery is also available on audio tape.
If you enjoy trying to unravel a carefully constructed mystery, I highly recommend Ellery Queen`s many excellent stories. The Spanish Cape Mystery would make a good introduction to Ellery Queen for the reader that has yet to have the pleasure of his acquaintance.
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