Investigating the bizarre will of late multimillionaire Noel Hawthorne - who left the bulk of his estate to his mistress and nearly nothing to his three sisters - astute sleuth Nero Wolfe stumbles upon a legacy of murder.
Will Wolfe survive these disruptions in his routine?
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 15 years ago
Fans of Nero Wolfe know how much he cherishes his ordered life: his schedule of morning and afternoon sessions in the plant rooms; his undisturbed mealtimes; his policies on never leaving the brownstone on business to name but a few. Wolfe is forced to abandon many of his long established polices in order to solve this problem. Three women, sisters, have come to Wolfe for help. Their brother has died unexpectedly and even more unexpectedly left his considerable fortune not to his sisters and his wife, but to his girlfriend. Wolfe rarely gets involved in such domestic matters but does agree to take this one on, perhaps to get his office rid of all the females for before the evening is over the brownstone is invaded by the three sisters, the widow, a secretary and the dead man's niece. It is only the beginning of Wolfe's trials though, before he reveals all Wolfe has to suffer a young woman at his table, leave the brownstone - on business, eat in someone else's home and even fend off an arrest warrant in his own home. This is popular, long running series of mysteries that focuses on the eccentric genius, Nero Wolfe who solves the most difficult of problems from the comfort of his brownstone (usually anyway). Wolfe is aided in his investigations by his assistant, Archie Goodwin who narrates the stories. Even though the puzzles in these mysteries are quite challenging these are very much cozies in that much of the appeal comes from the recurring cast of characters. Fans will not want to miss any opportunity to stop by for a visit to the brownstone. The overall story arc of this series is not so pronounced that the stories need to be read in any particular order.
Nero Wolf
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 16 years ago
This was a very good story .. I am a big fan of Nero's Wolf's He and Archie have become like familiy ...
Where Ther's a Will
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
Another in the fine collection of Nero Wolfe mysteries> I have enjoyed them all.
Where There's A Will...there's a death...
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Nero Wolfe and Archi Goodwin are asked to help break a will. It seems a very rich man, name of Noel Hawthorne, died and left most of his money to the 'OTHER WOMAN' and the wife is going to fight over it. His sisters DON'T want her to do so, as they all have good names they don't wish to be splashed through the mud of a very public, and very ugly, court battle. They want him to either stop the wife, break this will, find another will or maybe even get the 'OTHER WOMAN' to cough up some of the millions she will get. Right when it looks like Wolfe will just dismiss it all with a 'Pfui!' the police show up. It seems Mr. Hawthrone was murdered. Now Nero, with help from Archie, will have to get to the bottom of the murder if he wants any peace (or any money).
Stout's WORST, they say? Absolutely not!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
Millionaire Noel Hawthorne has just died in a hunting accident. In his will, he leaves his sisters (named April, May, and June) a peach, a pear, and an apple, respectively. But, to a young woman who was _not_ his wife, he leaves a huge chunk of his fortune. The sisters come to Wolfe to find out what's behind this wacky will. But Wolfe suspects that maybe the hunting accident was no accident...I am stunned to read that other reviewers consider this book to be one of Stout's worst. I completely disagree. How can this be a bad Wolfe entry when:Wolfe is faced with _three_ women in his house at onceWolfe faces the threat of arrest from Cramer Fred Durkin has his best scenes in the series so farArchie has one of his best outings(And finally,) Wolfe leaves the house!Sure, this is not the _best_ Wolfe story Stout ever wrote. It does have some character inconsistencies that later stories don't have. There are also some real problems with the plot. And, true, this would not be the book to start with for first-time Wolfe readers. But should it be included in the trash pile? Definitely not. An average Nero Wolfe story, after all, is better than most writers' "above average" output. Dig in.
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