Champagne for One |
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a Nero Wolfe & Archie Goodwin mystery Viking: New York, 1958 |
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Collins Crime Club: London, 1959 |
March 2010 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
High society and unwed mothers
In Champagne for One, Rex Stout allows Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin to mix into a clash of subcultures joined by charity: high (rich) society and unwed mothers. As usual among Rex Stout's generally excellent Nero Wolfe series of detective novels, there is an engaging cast of suspects, witnesses, police, and bystanders — and our two detectives investigate and eventually (if figuratively) bash these disparate heads together as they attempt to discover the why and how of a murder. Archie Goodwin gets a phone call out of the blue from an old acquaintance, inviting him on short notice to a small but fancy dinner party put on by the fellow's aunt, who is patroness of a home for unwed mothers. The annual party helps several of these young women to be reintroduced to polite society starting at the top, since a matching number of respectable young men of good social standing also attend. Not exactly Archie's sort of thing, but he's flexible, and of course presentable:
Nero Wolfe also is aware of the annual parties, but is less impressed at the whole idea:
Nevertheless, Archie has decided to attend. Archie is in arch form when the patroness, Mrs. Robilotti, shortly calls with her formal invitation. She remembers Archie from a criminal investigation a couple of years earlier, not favorably: A murder in view Unfortunately one of the young women dies at the dinner party, apparently poisoned, and — adding investigatorial insult to innocent demise — in full view of Archie Goodwin. It should be a simple problem for a sharp detective who actually is on the scene, but the circumstances all seem so straightforward that its solution is challenging and subtle. Champagne for One works very well in print, and is nicely presented as an episode in the Nero Wolfe TV/DVD series. An fine mystery novel, and Archie's talents as man-about-town and delver into feminine psychology are put to what we may call the champagne test.
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© 2010 Robert Wilfred Franson |
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