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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Introducing Tecumseh Fox
_Double for Death_ is the first of the Tecumseh Fox mysteries. Tecumseh Fox is a detective of an entirely different breed than Nero Wolfe. The opposite of fastidious and antisocial Wolfe, his farm is a collection of oddballs and drifters and Fox is famous for his inability to turn anybody away. While as smooth and cool in deduction as Wolfe, Fox's weakest links are his...
Published on August 12, 2002 by frumiousb

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not a Nero Wolfe Story
This is an interesting book because it's not a Nero Wolfe story, but it's a murder mystery that was duplicated in the Nero Wolfe series, but in this story, the same murder is being solved by Tecumsah Fox, Stout's other detective. It's the Tingley's Tidbits murder, where someone is putting quinine into Tingley's Tidbits.

I much prefer Nero Wolfe and Archie...
Published on February 10, 2008 by Helpful daughter


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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Introducing Tecumseh Fox, August 12, 2002
By 
_Double for Death_ is the first of the Tecumseh Fox mysteries. Tecumseh Fox is a detective of an entirely different breed than Nero Wolfe. The opposite of fastidious and antisocial Wolfe, his farm is a collection of oddballs and drifters and Fox is famous for his inability to turn anybody away. While as smooth and cool in deduction as Wolfe, Fox's weakest links are his less-than-perfect lieutenants.

In _Double For Death_ we have a corpse that may or may not be who it appears to be, a girl who keeps being revealed as a liar only to be found to be telling the truth, a detective with a disregard for the finer points of due process, and a man who has many reasons to be murdered. Fox needs to sort the strange double death of the murder victim and find the identity of the killer.

Stout considered this his best detective novel, and who am I to argue with the great man himself?
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Stout's somewhat snobbish bypath, December 18, 1997
By 
pjt@iki.fi (Espoo, Finland) - See all my reviews
In this book Stout presents his other notable character besides Nero Wolfe: Tecumseh Fox, a self-made man who is quite a benefactor for a detective. Double for Death does not quite match the well-balanced rhythm and urban atmosphere of his better known Wolfe series. This book underlines a little bit too much how its plot relies on the nuances of the English language. The solution is obvious if the reader happens to have an eye for spellathlons; if not, too bad. Still, the story is readable, and definitely a must for any serious Stout fan just in order to help appreciate the discreetly designed Wolfe-Goodwin setup in most of his books.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Read This AFTER You've Read All The Nero Wolfes, September 20, 2005
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I love Rex Stout. He wrote the best mysteries, bar none, ever written: the Nero Wolfe series. They crackle with wit and originality, and the plots are beautiful little puzzle-boxes of logic. What Wodehouse was to the comic novel, Stout was to the mystery.

Stout himself felt that his best-plotted novel was this one. Featuring Tecumseh Fox, it's longer than most of the Nero Wolfes, and (for me, anyway), not as much fun by a long shot. It's still enjoyable, but should not be put before the dozens of novels and short stories featuring that "mere genius" Wolfe.

I won't be rereading this one-- but look forward to the passage of a decade so I can begin rereading all the Wolfe canon with a fresh palate....
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars One of my favorite mystery writers, March 18, 2010
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This review is from: Double For Death (Kindle Edition)
I have been waiting for the Nero Wolfe series to be available for Kindle, it seems like forever. I'm not as big a fan of Tecumseh Fox as Nero Wolfe, but a Rex Stout mystery is a Rex Stout mystery.

I'm glad I purchased and read this book. It's a solid mystery with a good ending. I would expect that from Rex Stout. What I didn't expect, and really enjoyed, was the glimpses of Wolfe and Archie I got in Fox's personality. I found myself thinking, Wolfe would have said that or Archie would have done that.

If another Fox book becomes available, I will definitely buy it. In the meantime, I am reading and loving "Over My Dead Body" featuring Wolfe and Archie.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great 1940's Mystery by Rex Stout, March 17, 2011
I have read and enjoyed all three of the Tecumseh Fox novels (Double for Death, Broken Vase, & Bad for Business (orig. version of the Wolfe Tingley Tidbits short story)). The Fox novels are very good. Fox reminds me of the male protagonist in the Thin Man. Fox is very entertaining, suave and wealthy and is surrounded by a coterie of very, funny oddballs. In a sense, he is Archie's elder precursor. Stout somehow communicates his suaveness, sophistication and elegance. Fox is very much a man about the town and a man in charge.

Double for Death is also one of my favorites. Strongly drawn characters. Lots of action and some travel. Complicated and well-planned plot. I strongly recommend all of the Fox novels to Wolfe fans and anyone who likes a well-written and entertaining 1940's detective mystery. Stout offered us a rich universe of detective fiction. It'd be silly not to avail oneself of hours of reading pleasure.

I can guarantee you'll enjoy them each novel and maybe feel as grateful as I did. Discovering new detective novels by Rex Stout is wonderful! They are equally as good as the Wolfe Cannon.

BLURB FROM BOOK
Fox was his name...he specialized in murder but did not forsee Nancy. A corpse in a secluded hideout-a millionaire who thinks he is discreet (but isn't)-a panicky girl whose uncle is accused of murder-are some of the odd angles in the most curious case in Fox's career as a private detective. But these are only the first of a series of surprising...

FOR YOUR INFO
For die hard and craving Wolfe fans, Stout wrote two special novels featuring detectives from the Wolfe Cannon. I haven't read the Inspector Cramer (Red Threads) or Doll Bonner (The Hand in the Glove) novels but I tried each briefly and was tempted away by another book.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Double for Death, December 29, 2010
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This is a book consisting of two short stories. Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin are at their best in these stories.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not a Nero Wolfe Story, February 10, 2008
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This is an interesting book because it's not a Nero Wolfe story, but it's a murder mystery that was duplicated in the Nero Wolfe series, but in this story, the same murder is being solved by Tecumsah Fox, Stout's other detective. It's the Tingley's Tidbits murder, where someone is putting quinine into Tingley's Tidbits.

I much prefer Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin to Tecumsah Fox, but this is still a good book.
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double for Death
double for Death by Rex Stout (Mass Market Paperback - 1974)
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