Imagen del autor

Natalie Sumner Lincoln

Autor de The Red Seal

24 Obras 70 Miembros 4 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: public domain ca 1919

Series

Obras de Natalie Sumner Lincoln

The Red Seal (1920) 11 copias
I Spy (1916) 6 copias
The Unseen Ear (1921) 5 copias
The Nameless Man (1917) 4 copias
The Cat's Paw (1922) 4 copias
The Moving Finger (1918) 4 copias
The Meredith mystery (2019) 4 copias
The Lost Despatch (2011) 3 copias
The Trevor case (1912) 3 copias
The Thirteenth Letter. (1924) 3 copias
The three strings (1918) 2 copias

Etiquetado

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Miembros

Reseñas

Nothing is what it seems to be as events unfold in this entertaining mystery. Red seals and red herrings abound and will keep you guessing all the way through the final chapter!
 
Denunciada
Gmomaj | otra reseña | Mar 1, 2021 |
This was the final novel by Natalie Sumner Lincoln, after a career of mystery writing that began in the early years of the 20th century. This is one of her standalones, and like most of her works is set in Washington DC, with events unfolding on the fringes of the diplomatic community. When the body of dancer and socialite, Countess Ilda Zichy, is found in an empty house on Thirteenth Street, police attention focuses upon Colonel Wayne Campbell---even though he has only been back in the US for a few days after spending many years in Europe, and only took legal possession of the property, which was left to him by his aunt, four days before the murder. As Ilda's last movements are traced, suspicion becomes divided between Campbell and his step-son, Count Wolfgang Erdody; while rumours of love-triangles, indiscreet letters and blackmail begin to circulate. There is also a story that Ilda was secretly married, though no-one knows the identity of her husband, whom she met before she became famous. Wolf is attached to the Hungarian Legation and so for a time the police are held at bay by diplomatic immunity; and in defence of both himself and the young man, Campbell finds himself forced to conduct an investigation of sorts... 13 Thirteenth Street is a fair mystery that offers the reader (at least until its climax) some good, fair-play plotting and clues. However, its main strength is the positioning of Colonel Campbell as reluctant, almost involuntary, detective: a role he assumes in earnest quite late in the novel, after a second murder occurs, and the police - the thick-headed, third-degree types so often found in American mysteries - begin to close in. To that point, this is more the story of an ordinary person who finds himself caught up in a police investigation and under suspicion than a murder mystery as such. As a detective, Campbell is very much making it up as he goes along, with as much luck as judgement in his discoveries; although he does succeed in undermining the police's case by investigating the whereabouts of all the keys to the house, and by showing that several people close to the case own similar cars. All this is believable amateur stuff; so it is annoying when, at the last, he whips out a jury-rigged microscope and forceps and turns Sherlock Holmes. Even more annoying, after voicing his suspicions of a particular person for chapter after chapter, it then turns out he really suspected someone else all along---this, mind you, from a first-person narrator! Ultimately, cheat-y choices such as these lessen the book's success; while its attitude to its minority characters is also an issue.

    "Inspector Judson, you have implied that a most serious charge is to be laid against me"---I stopped as he took from his inside pocket a legal-looking document.
    "Go slow, Colonel," he cautioned. "You forget this warrant sworn for your arrest last Sunday is still out against you."
    "And that fact alone proves you have no case," I retorted, my anger finding vent at last. "Do you suppose for one instant that I would have been allowed my liberty otherwise?"
    "G'wan, we've been kidding you," exclaimed Judson derisively.
    "To the extent of giving me an opportunity to murder Aunt Polly---"
    My scorn stained Judson's weather-beaten cheeks a deep red. "Well, no, we didn't bargain on that," he admitted.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
lyzard | Jan 22, 2016 |
A pleasantly-to-read novell about spionage dringt the first World War. Some unexpected developments naar the end.
 
Denunciada
ReneH | Sep 26, 2013 |
Although the book was pleasant to read, I found the plot a bit too (unnecessarily) complicated. I Spy, the former book I read that was written by Natalie Sumner Lincoln, had a less complicated plot, and nevertheless was better. Still three stars, however.
 
Denunciada
ReneH | otra reseña | Sep 26, 2013 |

Estadísticas

Obras
24
Miembros
70
Popularidad
#248,179
Valoración
3.1
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
42
Idiomas
2

Tablas y Gráficos