Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
One of the best Wolfe's!, January 4, 2003
With my reading of this, I have read every Nero Wolfe novel. This is one of the best, in my opinion. Archie is sent to investigate whether a company's employee was murdered, or it was an accident. His interactions with one of the owners, a vegetarian with a taste for the exotic, are worth the price of the book alone. Archie also gets to put on his charm, and literally wine and dine plenty of women in this story, not to mention engage in his virtual warfare with Wolfe, until finally the mystery is solved. All of our favorites, from Saul to Fritz to Cramer are also present in this story. I was kept guessing until the very last page; I was suprised at how the end turned out. For me, that's the hallmark of a good mystery. The Wolfe books are all fairly formulaic, and this is a classic of that formula, but it works quite well.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
No Such Thing!, September 6, 2005
Some have criticized Stout's postwar Nero Wolfe stories as reactionary and lacking sparkle and creativity. Not this one. Yes, the plot device is predictable: that Archie is irresistable to women, and would do well planted in a big office disguised as an efficiency expert. The office has hundreds of good-looking women for Archie to interview, and he thinks he's died and gone to heaven for a while... Here, the dialogue sparkles and the plot is pretty good. Now, it is true that you have to put aside your wince reflex regarding rampant sexism in this one. If you can manage that, though, it's a great read. Michael Prichard once again does a spectacular job on the audiobook version. I especially appreciate his ability not only to do Wolfe better than anybody, but to handle multiple female roles distinctly and without flummery.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Archie in his favorite element, June 18, 2002
By A Customer
An employee of a very large corporation dies in a hit-and-run accident. Rumors abound that it was murder, disrupting morale. Nero and Archie are hired to either scotch the rumors or find the truth re: the mysterious death. These circumstances put Archie smack dab in the middle of hundreds of young working women -- many of them suspects, most of them of interest to Archie on other levels. This case gives him a chance to put many steak and wine dinners and many evenings of dancing on the old expense account, while he is in search of clues in this particularly confounding case. Neither the police nor Wolfe have much luck solving it for the longest time, and even Archie is frustrated by their lack of success (if not by the scenery he encounters along the way). This is very much Archie's story, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. I figured out the mystery myself rather early on -- something I'm proud of, since that seldom happens to me in Wolfe stories. Still, I had a wonderful time with this book, and especially got a kick of Wolfe's snorting dismissals of Archie more personal interest in the ladies. I also enjoyed reading about women in the workplace in those long ago days. How times have changed! All the women seemed to be in administrative positions. If they wanted power within the corporation, they got it through working for progressively more powerful men -- or in the case of Mrs. Pine, installing her husband on the board of directors. In that regard, this was a bit like unearthing a time capsule.
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