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Crime Dossier #3

Who Killed Robert Prentice?

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12 Dec 1936 - 31 May 1937
What is the significance of the railway ticket found in the cottage where the victim met his mistress, the lovely Suzanne L'Estrange? Why was a Belgian stamp found in the hall? Why did Robert Prentice write such a vindictive letter to Miss L'Estrange, and what was the fatal outcome? What did the blackmailer see through the bedroom window, and who tore up his photograph?

Test your powers of deduction when you break the sealed section containing the
NAME OF THE MURDERER.

96 pages, Hardcover

First published June 1, 1937

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Thomas Gizbert.
169 reviews4 followers
February 19, 2019
An amazing artefact. Perhaps because it was among the first of its kind, and nobody was around to tell the creators when to stop, it's chock full of incredible, ridiculous feelies executed with such care and attention to detail. It's also unmistakably adult in content and tone, and rewards close examination and clever thinking.

That having been said, my guess at the solution was like 100% wrong in every particular.

But I don't even care because I read it like 3 times cover to cover and made cramped insane notes and diagrams, and even though it's not canonical, my answer is, in a sense, a realer reading of the text than whatever any author tells me is correct.

Here's my answer. Spoilers follow, but of course they're not real spoilers:

So sure, it's a little tortured, and some of the characters are acting a little oddly here, but I think it's much better than the actual solution, which leaves so much unexplained! Which is why I think that (actual spoiler)
Profile Image for andrew y.
1,214 reviews14 followers
December 24, 2019
Really quite a fascinating work in the detective fiction genre. I had no idea there was any level of public appetite for publications like this in the early 20th century. Funny, as it is apropos for an update now - I’m sure it’d sell tons.
But the mystery was solid, all pieces were there for the solving to happen by the reader, and the denouement was exciting and intriguing without making me feel cheated.
Real good stuff.

Make sure you buy the folio though. The effect is completely spoiled by the hardback version.
Profile Image for Márcia.
592 reviews37 followers
May 21, 2023
3.5 ⭐
The mystery is very well laid out and the reader is provided with every piece of evidence. The story is immersive and you sympathize with the characters. Sadly I could not guess the murderer...
Profile Image for Rae.
3,969 reviews
May 8, 2008
This was a really fun interactive murder mystery to solve. The book is made to look like a crime dossier and contains all the physical evidence needed by the reader to solve the murder of Robert Prentice. The evidence consists of a spoof newspaper with interviews in it, an arsenic tablet (poison removed, of course) and various photographs and clues. A most "novel" way to read a mystery.
Profile Image for Jason.
47 reviews
January 26, 2013
This book scared the shit out of me. The crime scene photographs are terrifying.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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