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Ambrose Bierce and the Queen of Spades (Penguin Mysteries (Paperback))

Ambrose Bierce and the Queen of Spades (Penguin Mysteries (Paperback))

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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Bierce In Form
Review: Hall transports you into the life of both Bierce and Redmond in such a way that you walk with them throughout their adventure. The plot twists and turns, as does Bierce's mind and Redmond's reactions. Redmond's apprenticeship to Bierce and his learning the cynicism and wit of the master takes the reader on a trip into the mind and manner of Ambrose Bierce.....the American Sherlock Homes and Watson teaming up to battle injustice and murder.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Entertaining, informative hystery\mistory
Review: This book tells the story of young Tom Redmond, apprentice to the famous (or infamous, depending on how you look at it) Ambrose Bierce. Redmond and Bierce try to track down a Ripper-style killer of prostitutes and unravel a mystery that has ties to the California Gold Rush and the Railroad boom in California. All in all, the history is good (and you'll probably learn a good bit if you know nothing about mining or railroads) and the mysteries provide a nice little puzzle. Despite the title, Bierce is not the main character, Redmond is, and he's quite an interesting, well-developed and sympathetic one. Bierce is kind of a secondary character, although the book is peppered with his acerbic, sarcastic thinking (one of the things I enjoyed most of all, actually). This book is less Holmes-and-Watson than Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin, which is a more satisfying arrangement, I think. I enjoyed it and I think most people who like historical mysteries will enjoy it also.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Please don't compare this with The Alienist
Review: To start, I liked this book, but not as much as I hoped to like it. It is a nice historical mystery, but it is not in the league of The Alienist, a work to which it is often compared. The narrator, Tom Redmond, is a likeable character, but just as he is confused with the many characters in this mystery, so is the reader.

The story searches for the Morton Street Slasher, but the reader who wants a plot similar to the Alienist (which follows the trail of the killer) will be disappointed to learn that this book is more about mining and railroad politics than the search for a killer. If you are interested in the backroom politics of San Francisco in the 1870's or really love the wit of Ambrose Bierce, then you'll probably love this book ... if you're like me, and you like Ambrose Bierce's dark humor but could do without the smoke-filled rooms, then you'll just find it an interesting diversion.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Ambrose Bierce, writer, curmudgeon, detective?
Review: Using Ambrose Bierce as the detective in this mystery novel set in 1880's San Francisco is a clever concept. Acerbic and fiercely intelligent, Bierce makes a good protagonist. Told from the perspective of a young reporter, Ambrose Bierce and The Queen of Spades may be a bit convoluted as a mystery but as a look at a California that was in the control of the railroad industry it excels. Starting each chapter with a selection of Bierce's Devil's Dictionary sets the tone for the book well, and this a solid addition to the historical mystery genre.


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