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Some Buried Caesar

Some Buried Caesar

List Price: $29.95
Your Price: $18.87
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Wolfe Stands the Test of Time
Review: I'm not sure I'd tale the time to sit down to read Stout's old classics, but Michael Prichard's audiobook narration captures both Archie Goodwin and his rotund boss in a way that makes a long summer car trip seem a lot shorter. Tom Pratt, who owns a bunch of fast food restaurants circa 1938, buys Hickory Caesar Grindon, a champion sire of prized Guernsey cows, for $45,000. The Osgoods, Fred and his children Clyde and Nancy, old money riding out the Great Depression on thousands of family owned acres around Crowfield, NY, want to stop the sale to Pratt who intends to barbecue Caesar. Pratt's niece Carolyn tells Archie of a vamp named Lily Rowan, who destroyed Clyde Osgood and has her brother Jimmy in mind for her next conquest. Lily, a precocious presumably promiscuous fixture in future stories, is fascinated by Archie, her "Escamillo" whom she is meeting for the first time.

Clyde is found dead in the pasture with Hickory Caesar standing over him. Wolfe's only there because Archie ran his car into a ditch on the way to an orchid exposition, but he decides to stay on to prove the bull didn't kill Clyde. He finds a letter telling of a debt owed to Bronson, a mysterious man of questionable character who came to Crowfield with Clyde. The next day Bronson is found dead in a barn stall with a pitchfork through his chest, a stall Archie was in the day before.

Police Captain Barrow believes Archie is holding out, which he is, arrests him as a material witness to murder and throws him in the county jail. A fun sidebar develops when Archie meets Basil, a con man who's mastered a game with three spoons and a pea. Basil shows Archie how to get things done in the lockup, and within a day Archie is organizing the inmates in the Crowfield County Prisoner's Union.

Wolfe appears in DA Waddell's office in his "customary unhurried waddle" and browbeats him to release Archie with the notion that he needs him to solve the crimes the DA and Capt. Barrow cannot. They do, of course, and the solution seems so obvious once Wolfe ties together all the facts he saw that others missed. Isn't that what Nero Wolfe is all about?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wolfe in the wilds of upstate New York
Review: If you're interested in an audio edition, the unabridged narration by Michael Pritchard is good. The title is taken from a poem, "The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam".

Some bad blood between Wolfe and another orchid fancier does what no fee could: Wolfe and Archie are on their way to the Exposition at Crowfield, so that Wolfe can exhibit some of his orchids and take prizes away from his rival. But just outside a ranch near Crowfield, one of the tires blows out at 55 MPH, and the car crashes into a tree. (It's worth picking up this book just to watch Wolfe's reaction to this, given his phobia about moving vehicles.)

Unfortunately, when they cut across a pasture en route to the house, they don't notice until it's too late (1) the farmhand guarding it with a shotgun, yelling at them to go back, and (2) Hickory Caesar Grindon, the prize bull (worth $45000 in 1936!) inside the pasture. On instructions from Wolfe, Archie gets to clear the fence (luring the bull away) while Wolfe takes up residence on a boulder until he can be rescued. (Do I need to mention that this is worth seeing?)

Introducing Lily Rowan, who ever after calls Archie 'Escamillo' after a bullfighter in _Carmen_. At least 5 people have motives to murder her: Clyde Osgood, who ruined himself after taking up with her (she's now dropped him); his father and sister, who blame Lily for Clyde's ruin; his ex-fiancee, Carolyn Pratt; and Carolyn's brother, who's just getting involved with Lily. As it happens, they're all guests or acquaintances of Tom Pratt, who built the ranch on his birthplace after getting rich running a chain of fast-food restaurants. He's throwing a barbecue in a few days, and bought Caesar as a publicity stunt, to serve as the main course.

The local cattle ranchers and stock hands think he's committing a monstrous crime against the Guernsey breed, and hold it against Monte McMillan for selling Caesar. (Monte takes umbrage; he doesn't like Caesar's fate, but none of those fine gentlemen offered him anything like a fair price for Caesar. The Depression and an anthrax epidemic in his herd have wiped him out.) So Monte pitches in to help guard Caesar from any possible do-gooders who might try to steal him. (On top of everything, Clyde has bet Tom Pratt $10000 that Caesar won't make it to the barbecue.) Wolfe signs Archie up to help, since the ranch is more comfortable than the hotel in Crowfield.

But Caesar isn't the first victim of sudden death. On Archie's watch, a dead man is found in Caesar's pasture, apparently gored by the bull. But Wolfe consoles Archie privately: Wolfe figured out that it was murder, and who, how, and why, before the doctor showed up. He doesn't spill any details, not wanting to be entangled in Crowfield, especially with no fee; but when the victim's family doesn't buy the goring theory, he takes the job.

Good stuff: what Wolfe will put up with while in search of a comfy chair; Archie and Wolfe tangling with the local law, who'd love to sweep this case under a rug; the various relationships between the self-made Pratt family and the old-money Osgoods; and the Exposition itself.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wolfe in an unexpected setting . . . .
Review: In this novel Wolfe finds himself in quite a different world than his familiar brownstone. The portly detective who never leaves home finds himself stranded far from home -- a bit like the situation in Too Many Cooks.

Characterization seems to shine in this early Wolfe novel. Archie does indeed meet Lily Rowan for the first time, as another reviewer points out. The repartee between these two is delightful, and provides an interesting love interest. Wolfe -- perhaps destabilized by being "stuck" in an unfamiliar setting -- is at his most autocratic, eccentric, and unpredictable.

This very early Wolfe novel, first published in 1938, has some of the freshness of other early Wolfe novels. It was written when the character of Wolfe was still rather new to Rex Stout. It centers around a most peculiar crime. I'll avoid describing that to keep the reading experience fresh for the reader. Suffice to say, it is very difficult through the first third of this novel to convince the District Attorney that a crime has even been committed!

Given the excellence of Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe novels, I'm only surprised that so few are currently in print. This book-- if it can be obtained-- is a good one to put on your permanent shelves.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wolfe in an unexpected setting . . . .
Review: In this novel Wolfe finds himself in quite a different world than his familiar brownstone. The portly detective who never leaves home finds himself stranded far from home -- a bit like the situation in Too Many Cooks.

Characterization seems to shine in this early Wolfe novel. Archie does indeed meet Lily Rowan for the first time, as another reviewer points out. The repartee between these two is delightful, and provides an interesting love interest. Wolfe -- perhaps destabilized by being "stuck" in an unfamiliar setting -- is at his most autocratic, eccentric, and unpredictable.

This very early Wolfe novel, first published in 1938, has some of the freshness of other early Wolfe novels. It was written when the character of Wolfe was still rather new to Rex Stout. It centers around a most peculiar crime. I'll avoid describing that to keep the reading experience fresh for the reader. Suffice to say, it is very difficult through the first third of this novel to convince the District Attorney that a crime has even been committed!

Given the excellence of Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe novels, I'm only surprised that so few are currently in print. This book-- if it can be obtained-- is a good one to put on your permanent shelves.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Some Buried Caesar
Review: One of Stout's best Wolfe novels. The mystery itself is not really entirely gratifying, but the story and the characters that inhabit the mystery make it all worthwhile. The conflicts and dialogue of the characters add to the realism of the novel as well. One of Stout's most accomplished novels.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Full of Bull
Review: Rex Stout's sixth Nero Wolfe novel "Some Buried Caesar" is considered by many fans and critics to be the first great offering in the series. Wolfe, on his way to an orchid competition in upstate New York, takes an unexpected stop when Archie crashes the car in the middle of nowhere. While stranded, Wolfe and Archie encounter a prize-winning bull worth $45,000, a wise-cracking female named Lily Rowan, and of course, murder.

Like the previous Wolfe outing "Too Many Cooks," Stout places the heavyset detective out of his element, and the results are wildly entertaining. Among the highlights: Wolfe drinking warm beer (Horrors!), Archie in jail for the first time, and many unsavory characters. With this novel, Stout really has a good grip on his characters and how they behave. Great fun!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Full of Bull
Review: Rex Stout's sixth Nero Wolfe novel "Some Buried Caesar" is considered by many fans and critics to be the first great offering in the series. Wolfe, on his way to an orchid competition in upstate New York, takes an unexpected stop when Archie crashes the car in the middle of nowhere. While stranded, Wolfe and Archie encounter a prize-winning bull worth $45,000, a wise-cracking female named Lily Rowan, and of course, murder.

Like the previous Wolfe outing "Too Many Cooks," Stout places the heavyset detective out of his element, and the results are wildly entertaining. Among the highlights: Wolfe drinking warm beer (Horrors!), Archie in jail for the first time, and many unsavory characters. With this novel, Stout really has a good grip on his characters and how they behave. Great fun!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Full of Bull
Review: Rex Stout's sixth Nero Wolfe novel "Some Buried Caesar" is considered by many fans and critics to be the first great offering in the series. Wolfe, on his way to an orchid competition in upstate New York, takes an unexpected stop when Archie crashes the car in the middle of nowhere. While stranded, Wolfe and Archie encounter a prize-winning bull worth $45,000, a wise-cracking female named Lily Rowan, and of course, murder.

Like the previous Wolfe outing "Too Many Cooks," Stout places the heavyset detective out of his element, and the results are wildly entertaining. Among the highlights: Wolfe drinking warm beer (Horrors!), Archie in jail for the first time, and many unsavory characters. With this novel, Stout really has a good grip on his characters and how they behave. Great fun!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wonderful
Review: Stout in his prime in a terrifically enjoyable read. One of his best

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Nero Wolfe against Fast-food menance
Review: This delicious story contains several subtle differences: Nero is out of his beloved house, Archie meets for the first time Lily Rowan (learn why she calls him Escamillo), and Nero has to solve a mortal mystery before they make him eat a fast-food meal.


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