"Yes, there's nothing wrong with power. The world needs power. The world needs power more today than ever before in history. Enlightened power--if you won't laugh. Power directed toward the good. Instead of the other way."
This is another book from my dad. I've never read Ellery Queen before though I've heard of him. The King is Dead is one of the better mysteries I've read. It starts out abruptly--"The invasion of the Queen apartment occurred at 8:08 o'clock of an ordinary June morning..." The invasion? What invasion? That quickly becomes apparent. The mystery is introduced right away--Abel Bendigo (which means "I bless" in Spanish, by the way) tells the Queens, Ellery and his father, an Inspector, that his older brother, King, has received a death threat. Abel wants the Queens to come with him immediately to find out who has sent the threat. The mystery is cloaked in mystery from the start. Who wants to kill King? Abel seems to know but wants his suspicions confirmed. Why the Queens? The Queens are whisked away to the private Bendigo Island, an old fortress from World War 2 that the Bendigos took over and now use as their central work base but also their home base. What is this island? Why do the Bendigos live here? How do their employees live here? Why such secrecy?
Then, the book moves a little slowly as Ellery and the Inspector learn more about the island and its ways. Frustration builds as the Queens aren't allowed to do much but are still expected to solve this mystery. Again, why? If Abel already suspects someone, just find that person, confront him or her, and move on. But, then, the book picks up again when the "impossible" happens, meaning it's clearly not impossible.
My favorite section is the end. Ellery leaves the island and goes to the Bendigos' hometown to learn more about them. It's not just Abel and King--there's a middle brother also, Judah (yes, the names are significant). That chapter is mostly comprised of Ellery's notes from his interviews with the townspeople who remember the Bendigo boys and their parents. There are also interesting notes about the development of the town since the war. It's a town Ellery knows (I don't know if it's in other Queen books, but it seems to have been), and he sees and feels the changes acutely. Are they really developments? That's debatable, but I appreciate how Queen worked in a portrait of a town and its people and a commentary on modern adaptations in small towns that's somehow poignant and sad in the midst of the information given about the Bendigos. What Ellery learns there leads to his revelation about how the impossible became possible. It's not a surprise, exactly, when it's all revealed, but I don't think it was supposed to be.
What makes this book so good to me is the character sketch. Queen draws parallels between Hitler and Bendigo. I don't know who was active in the 50s in politics and munitions and such, so I'm not sure if there was a contemporary analog to King Bendigo, a man so rich from arms deals that he can own an island and has more power than all the presidents of every country combined, but even if there wasn't one person Queen was referencing, there was definitely symbolism at play here. Hitler makes sense as a parallel--he started out in disgrace and quickly moved to, plummeted towards, even, success and then just as quickly fell back into disgrace in the worst way. While alive and active, Hitler had more power than any bad man should. Any bad man because, presumably, a good man would use that power for the good of humanity. A bad man would--and bad men have--use it for his own ends, disregarding the good of humanity as a whole in favor of achieving his personal goals and bringing his personal dreams to fruition.
The revelation of King's character, deduced from interviews with people who knew him as a boy, was the most interesting part of this book for me. I also liked how Queen brought it all together and how the book ended--in the only way it could, in my opinion. The ending dialogue is strong and ties all the pieces together very well.
Overall, I really enjoyed this book, I highly recommend it, and I would definitely read Ellery Queen again.