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The Baffle Book: Fifteen Fiendishly Challenging Detective Puzzles

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Includes fifteen detective puzzles, the unravelling of which requires you to develop your latent powers of observation and deduction. In words, charts, and diagrams, this work puts you at the crime scene and presents you with the facts established by the police.

150 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 2006

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Lassiter Wren

14 books

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5 stars
6 (18%)
4 stars
9 (28%)
3 stars
15 (46%)
2 stars
1 (3%)
1 star
1 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
6,446 reviews83 followers
March 28, 2023
A collection of mysteries the reader is supposed to solve themselves. Something like a more adult Encyclopedia Brown. Pretty good brain teasers, to keep the mind sharp.
1,011 reviews20 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
March 3, 2026
This is an American Mystery Classic reprint of a 1928 collection of crime puzzle stories. G. T. Harbor, the creator of the very popular Murdle game, wrote the introduction to this edition. He credits this book as being "possibly the most influential mystery book ever written" because it was the first of the mystery puzzle books.

Each story is three of four pages long. A crime is described and the evidence is outlined. Maps, diagrams, fingerprints and exhibits are included for some stories. The story ends with questions like who committed the crime? or, where should the police look for evidence? or, how did the detective solve the case? You turn the book over, go to the back, and get the answers and explanations.

The puzzles are at every level of difficulty. Some answers are obvious by looking at the evidence. Some require thought but can be deducted. Some don't really make sense. In two stories we get people making up very clever codes which it is not possible anyone could understand. Some are based on inferences that seem awful strained.

It is a fun gimmick. There is a bunch of 1920s background with elegant trains, country homes and telegrams. There is a little casual racism. "Naturally subtle, the Oriental mind, when it turns to crime, manages sometimes to baffle the authorities neatly." (Oddly, that story is about a crime in India. Indians where not traditionally considered "Orientals")

I enjoyed guessing the answers. The stories are clever. This is fun.
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507 reviews22 followers
September 5, 2017
I wasn't sure when I started this how old the book was. It was clear from the first story that it wasn't exactly current. However, when I finally checked the published date, the 1928 date clarified why some of the details just weren't within my realm of knowledge. I still think I could have done better at deducing some of the answers (for instance, I basically didn't try on the the last mystery) and I could have scored better than I did. I got a 70 out of 150.
336 reviews8 followers
March 29, 2026
Entertaining but not memorable. Time has worked its ills on many of the stories.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews