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Death-Watch (A Dr. Gideon Fell Mystery)

Death-Watch (A Dr. Gideon Fell Mystery)

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellent Dialog, Interesting Characters
Review: Another review posted here is in error. It is not a review of this book. I do not know what happened, but . . . .

Death Watch by John Dickson Carr is one of the most intricately plotted who-done-its that I've read in a while. A policeman is murdered after midnight in a darkened house. The murder weapon is the hour hand of a large hall clock. The hands of the clock had been stolen from the same house two nights before.

Carr assembles a good group of suspects. Some own the house, others are visitors or lodgers in the house.

Carr challenges the reader by amassing detail that the reader is expected to remember, and also, by changing direction just when the reader is beginning to think a suspect is the likely killer.

This novel is from the 1930's -- 1935, to be exact -- and thus comes to us from the golden age of detective fiction. The years of the "Black Mask" magazine, and the era of detective writers such as Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett. Carr was one of the masters. One senses considerable quality of writing here.

Carr is a master of dialog, and uses this skill to bring his characters to life. One engine driving the book is the constant bickering and disagreement between Inspector Hadley and Dr. Gideon Fell, both of Scotland Yard. Hadley is something of a straight man, and a foil for Dr. Fell. Inspector Hadley is an experienced and reasonably intelligent policeman, but is somewhat plodding and not very imaginative. Dr. Fell, to the contrary, is highly intuitive and strikes deductions that at times rise to brilliance.

What seems so obvious and clear to Inspector Hadley -- and to the reader most of the time -- is soon shot down and debunked by Fell's unerring analysis.

The whole is great fun. Carr's mysteries often have a strong dash of the "gothic flavor." Spooky houses, secret passages, bizarre appearances and disappearances, sinister characters, the trappings of superstition -- the works! If you enjoy such effects, it's just one more source of enjoyment.

I highly recommend the book. However, it is somewhat demanding. I would not try to read it while half asleep, nor would I begin the book and then lay it aside for several days. Without a real effort to concentrate, it is difficult to remember all the characters, clues, relevant details, or twists of plot.

Many people must be willing to put forth the effort because the John Dickson Carr mysteries continue to be popular many years after the author's death.

Patrick Callahan

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellent Dialog, Interesting Characters
Review: Another review posted here is in error. It is not a review of this book. I do not know what happened, but . . . .

Death Watch by John Dickson Carr is one of the most intricately plotted who-done-its that I've read in a while. A policeman is murdered after midnight in a darkened house. The murder weapon is the hour hand of a large hall clock. The hands of the clock had been stolen from the same house two nights before.

Carr assembles a good group of suspects. Some own the house, others are visitors or lodgers in the house.

Carr challenges the reader by amassing detail that the reader is expected to remember, and also, by changing direction just when the reader is beginning to think a suspect is the likely killer.

This novel is from the 1930's -- 1935, to be exact -- and thus comes to us from the golden age of detective fiction. The years of the "Black Mask" magazine, and the era of detective writers such as Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett. Carr was one of the masters. One senses considerable quality of writing here.

Carr is a master of dialog, and uses this skill to bring his characters to life. One engine driving the book is the constant bickering and disagreement between Inspector Hadley and Dr. Gideon Fell, both of Scotland Yard. Hadley is something of a straight man, and a foil for Dr. Fell. Inspector Hadley is an experienced and reasonably intelligent policeman, but is somewhat plodding and not very imaginative. Dr. Fell, to the contrary, is highly intuitive and strikes deductions that at times rise to brilliance.

What seems so obvious and clear to Inspector Hadley -- and to the reader most of the time -- is soon shot down and debunked by Fell's unerring analysis.

The whole is great fun. Carr's mysteries often have a strong dash of the "gothic flavor." Spooky houses, secret passages, bizarre appearances and disappearances, sinister characters, the trappings of superstition -- the works! If you enjoy such effects, it's just one more source of enjoyment.

I highly recommend the book. However, it is somewhat demanding. I would not try to read it while half asleep, nor would I begin the book and then lay it aside for several days. Without a real effort to concentrate, it is difficult to remember all the characters, clues, relevant details, or twists of plot.

Many people must be willing to put forth the effort because the John Dickson Carr mysteries continue to be popular many years after the author's death.

Patrick Callahan

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not Among Carr's Best
Review: Much of his work is now forgotten, but during his lifetime John Dickson Carr was regarded as among the finest of mystery novelists, a writer who counted both Agatha Christie and Dorothy Sayers among his many fans. Unfortunately, the 1935 DEATH-WATCH, featuring Carr's favorite sleuth Dr. Gideon Fell, is among the writer's less interesting works.

The story concerns the discovery of a presumably homeless man who appears to have stumbled into a respectable boarding house--only to be stabbed through the neck with the minute hand of a enormous clock. Carr was greatly celebrated for his wit, his skill at description, and his knack for ringing changes on the classic "locked room" format, but none of these three gifts are seen to any degree in this particular novel, which comes complete with everything from roof-top meetings to secret passages. The whole thing reads like a lesser effort by Mary Roberts Rhinehart.

In spite of these flaws Carr does manage to finish up with a remarkable solution that will surprise most readers--assuming, of course, that they haven't been worn out by the book before they get to the end. Worth reading, but not one of Carr's best.

GFT, Amazon Reviewer
In memory of Cujo, 1992-2005
An Orange Cat and a Dear and Faithful Companion, Greatly Missed


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