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Fleming Stone #3

Αλυσίδα αποδείξεων

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Ο Ρόμπερτ Πέμπροουκ, ένας στρυφνός και κακότροπος ηλικιωμένος άντρας, βρίσκεται δολοφονημένος στο διαμέρισμά του, ακριβώς δίπλα στο διαμέρισμα όπου ζει ο νεαρός δικηγόρος Ότις Λάντον μαζί τη χήρα αδελφή του. Τα μόνα πρόσωπα που είχαν άμεση επαφή με τον ηλικιωμένο άντρα είναι η ανιψιά του Τζάνετ και μία υπηρέτρια. Πολύ σύντομα οι υποψίες στρέφονται στην Τζάνετ, που κατηγορείται ότι σκότωσε τον θείο της με μια καρφίτσα καπέλου.
Ο Ότις, που έχει αρχίσει να ερωτεύεται την Τζάνετ, είναι πεπεισμένος ότι δεν έχει καμία σχέση με τη δολοφονία. Θέλοντας να αποδείξει την αθωότητά της, προσπαθεί να ενώσει τους κρίκους της αλυσίδας των αποδεικτικών στοιχείων - έναν πίνακα δρομολογίων του τρένου, ένα κλειδί, εισιτήρια για μια παράσταση και ένα μαντίλι με τα αρχικά ενός ονόματος.
Ο χρόνος δεν είναι σύμμαχος και, αφού δεν έχει άλλη λύση, αποφασίζει να ζητήσει τη βοήθεια του ντετέκτιβ Φλέμινγκ Στόουν: είναι ο μόνος που ίσως καταφέρει να βρει την άκρη του νήματος.

244 pages

Published February 1, 2023

206 people are currently reading
310 people want to read

About the author

Carolyn Wells

807 books47 followers
Carolyn Wells was a prolific writer for over 40 years and was especially noted for her humor, and she was a frequent contributor of nonsense verse and whimsical pieces to such little magazines as Gelett Burgess' The Lark, the Chap Book, the Yellow Book, and the Philistine.

Librarian note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name.

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5 stars
72 (21%)
4 stars
85 (25%)
3 stars
104 (31%)
2 stars
47 (14%)
1 star
22 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 43 reviews
Profile Image for Louie the Mustache Matos.
1,427 reviews142 followers
July 2, 2023
I originally received an invitation earlier this year to grab this book for free via one of the lists to which I subscribe, and I was immediately engaged by the cover blurb. Little did I realize that the author was from a bygone era (born June 18, 1862 — died March 26, 1942), not that it disqualifies the author in my eyes. I love reading books that expand my worldview whether it is horizontally through time or vertically in perspective.

Carolyn Wells wrote and published 170 books of various genres, but mostly mysteries. I had never read a Carolyn Wells book and would be OK to read others. One of the criticisms of her work lie in the fact that her work is largely formulaic, but it doesn't really matter when one has never read any of her previous work, and much more importantly murder mysteries as a whole are practically all formulaic.

Chain of Evidence is a traditional locked-room murder mystery in which the dead body is found in a locked room where no one could have gotten in or out. In this case, the niece and a servant locked the door with a chain, went to bed, only to discover that in the morning the uncle is dead. A lawyer from the building witnesses some of the proceedings and gets involved. He does much of the initial investigating such that when Fleming Stone gets involved near the end (fully 75 % has nothing to do with Stone) a strong foundation has been built.

I can't say very much about Fleming Stone because his reputation has been established before this book. (It's number three in his series of mystery novels.) I enjoyed the story. I loved the locked door aspect. The characters are OK (kind of stock characters from any given vintage period, New York, murder mystery). I liked it just fine, and would definitely read more to see if it really does feel like a carbon copy of this one. I'm calling it right down the middle.
Profile Image for Leo.
5,013 reviews635 followers
October 15, 2020
This just wasn't good, had nothing enjoyable about it I've read three books by her and only one, I kinda liked. Think I have to stop trying. Carolyn Wells mysteries is just not for me
Profile Image for Sharon Barrow Wilfong.
1,136 reviews3,968 followers
December 16, 2019
Again, I found the gooey-eyed male narrator who simply can't believe such a darling girl could ever commit murder, maudlin.

However, it's a good mystery. A young woman lives with her tyrannical uncle. One morning she finds him dead in his bed. At first it seems he died of natural causes, but when the doctor comes to examine him, he finds he's been murdered.

There is one problem. There were only two other people besides the murdered man, in the apartment the night of the murder. The woman and her maid. The front door was chained shut and the windows all latched. Both women claim innocence, but if neither of them did it, who did?

A nice variation on the "locked room" mystery.
Profile Image for Tam May.
Author 24 books696 followers
August 5, 2018
This is my third Fleming Stone book and I will probably not be reading another one for quite a while. Don't get me wrong, they're a fun read. But they are also very formulaic. True, mystery fiction does follow a pattern (body discovered, crime scene investigation, suspect interviews, etc) which is what makes it so fun to read. But I mean here that Wells basically uses the same characters but with different names, like the beautiful young woman whom the main character detective falls in love with and is always the most likely suspect, the detective mooning over her, the male suspect whom the detective suspects the beautiful woman is in love with and is jealous of, etc. It just started to get old on me after a while. I also have an issue with the idea of the title character (Fleming Stone) being a deus ex machina kind of thing - that is, he always comes in in the last part of the book and solves the crime when the main character has been struggling all through the book. I get this is Wells' gimmick but it doesn't quite sit well with me. To me, the fun of reading cozy mysteries is to get to know the main sleuth and how he/she works and watching them uncover the clues, suspects, etc., that leads them to the crime. It sort of defeats the purpose when the sleuth comes in just in the nick of time to save the day. So Wells' books are fun, mindless reading but in small doses
Profile Image for Shilpa.
Author 4 books14 followers
March 5, 2019
A murder takes place in a locked apartment with the victim's niece and a servant within the premises. The narrator of this story is a lawyer, Otis Landon, who is a new neighbor of the victim. Landon falls in love with the victim's niece, Janet Pembroke and sets about to investigate with a few random clues he collects at the scene of crime. Unable to reach any inference, he seeks help from the renowned detective, Fleming Stone.

The story is linear in its progression and the detective appears almost towards the end of the story. Carolyn Wells has written this book more than a century ago. While referring to the servant, Charlotte, the narrator has used the word, 'colored', a little too often. In recent times, repeated use of the adjective 'colored' may be termed as objectionable by many readers all around the world.
Also, Landon going about the crime scene collecting material evidence in the victim's room and putting it in his pocket seemed weird, since we all know that one isn't supposed to touch anything until the arrival of the police.
Overall, this mystery does not have any subplot or twists. With limited number of characters, A Chain of Evidence has an old world charm that is appealing to lovers of traditional mysteries. I liked it.
Profile Image for Bish Denham.
Author 8 books39 followers
January 7, 2015
Not particularly stellar, not anything like Ptomaine Street which I thoroughly enjoyed. A Chain of Evidence is a rather bland mystery. Okay is about all I can say about it.
Profile Image for Pamela Mclaren.
1,701 reviews114 followers
February 25, 2015
This story by Carolyn Wells has, has had as her previous ones, a good mystery but if anything the dialogue is very dated. This is another locked room mystery; this time its an apartment building with but one exit, the front door. The door is chained at 10 p.m., all the windows latched and the only suspects, a young woman and her female servant left in the apartment with the woman's uncle. The next morning, the man is found dead in his bed but its not a natural death, there's a pin stuck in his neck.

When the doctor is arrives at the scene, the neighbors across the way -- an attorney and his sister -- are alerted to the incident and are drawn into it. The attorney quickly gets himself involved, trying to find clues (everyone in this book just about thinks they are detectives!) and while the young woman is difficult to read, contradictory and unfriendly, he apparently falls for her and is convinced that he will prove her innocent of the crime.

At a certain point, he calls in Fleming Stone, the real detective, who quickly solves the mystery. The language is stilted and its hard to believe that even in the 1910s (the book was written in 1912), the police would have handled this case in this cavalier manner.

Profile Image for Mystic Miraflores.
1,402 reviews7 followers
October 14, 2020
As soon as I heard the murderer's name and position, I know he would be the one to do it, as neither Janet nor Charlotte committed the crime. There was such a tiny pool of suspects. Interestingly, the Black/colored characters (servants) were portrayed as ignorant and subservient. I know this description was a sign of the times in which this book was written. The Blacks didn't know how to speak well, such as saying "sumpin" instead of "something". The white main characters treated them with disdain. How things really changed since that time?
6 reviews
July 9, 2016
Delightful

This was my first Carolyn Wells mystery. I enjoyed reading about the New York of that era. The Author's style of writing kept me interested right from the beginning. I plan to follow up with another mystery by this Author.



1,164 reviews2 followers
September 27, 2016

I enjoyed this old fashioned mystery, it's rather slow pace and its evocation of old New York City. The suspense grew slowly and the solving of the mystery was all the more satisfying because of it.
Profile Image for Joe Arieno.
131 reviews1 follower
July 13, 2016
And yet another classic from the mind of Carolyn Wells.
279 reviews5 followers
July 10, 2016
Melodrama

This story is a melodramatic, mostly a silly romance. There is very little mystery. The characters are shallow and unbelievable.
278 reviews2 followers
July 25, 2016
A really smart who done-it

This was a tight mystery. No waste or filler. It moved steadily its ending. Engaging. I had my suspicions but no proof until the end almost. A good read
Profile Image for Cindy B. .
3,899 reviews219 followers
December 27, 2017
Murder, romance, courtrooms, and a Sherlock Holmes-sort of solver. Well narrated by Richard Kilmer. Recommended for classic mystery lovers. Librivox audiobook
1,004 reviews2 followers
August 11, 2016
Kindle-Free-Early Bird Books. 3.5 stars. An enjoyable old fashioned mystery
Profile Image for Ken Langwell.
Author 1 book8 followers
August 27, 2019
Couldn't get off of first base with this book

If there was a writing contest, and the single piece of criterion for winning that contest was writing the slowest beginning to a book, this book would win. I recognize that with 50 plus reviews, this book is tracking at four out of five stars. However, the beginning was so painfully slow, and there are so many other great books out there that grab you from the first page, I simply could not talk myself into suffering through it. Maybe the story is good once you get into it, but I simply didn't have the patience for this one.
Profile Image for Susan.
7,315 reviews70 followers
January 24, 2019
Robert Pembroke has been found dead in a locked apartment with only two other occupants - his niece and a servant. Neighbour and lawyer Otis Landon follows the clues to try and prove the niece, Janet Pembroke, innocent.
As would seem to be normal in these stories most of the tale and clues are revealed before the detective Fleming Stone appears and solves the case. But still an enjoyable story.
Profile Image for Elisa.
4,354 reviews44 followers
October 11, 2022
A very entertaining locked room mystery. It is a little outdated: the hero falls madly in love with a woman he just met and who might have murdered her uncle, the "colored" servant who is colored, colored, colored and it is the only thing we ever learn about her, and how can the sister's theories be right, if she's only a woman? But the mystery itself is compelling and difficult and I didn't see it coming. Awful Audible narration though.
Profile Image for Pat.
395 reviews2 followers
October 23, 2022
juvenile

This series is my least favorite type. The lead character keeps going over and over how he feels, she fees, they feel; why it might be so….over and over. You’ve said it before! Then the detective, Fleming Stone comes and solves it in three pages. Furthermore all the sudden changes of emotion of the supposedly perfect girl are never satisfactorily explained. I repeat…juvenile writing and juvenile plot.
Profile Image for Benjamin.
844 reviews27 followers
April 26, 2019
An excellent example of a locked-room mystery: the victim is found in a locked room with no evidence of the murderer's ingress or egress. Further, the obvious suspects are obviously not guilty. This is an old book (1912) so police procedure is much different, and the important private detective, Fleming Stone, doesn't show up until the last chapter.
146 reviews
February 15, 2020
An apparent locked door mystery

Robert Pembroke a mean and hated person is found murdered in a locked apartment with only Janet Pembroke and her maid inside the apartment if they are not guilty how could anyone else enter the apartment? Otis Pembroke belives she is innocent but it is up to Fleming Stone to solve the case. A 1912 classic. Recommended.
1,435 reviews
February 18, 2018
A Compelling Mystery

I didn't give it five stars because I felt it just got too "wordy" with so much repetition. I could believe the hero had fallen in love at first sight, as the same thing had happened between my late husband and myself.
42 reviews
January 5, 2019
This is much better than the Mystery Girl! It is another locked room mystery with "love" at first sight & a girl in distress that acts queerly. It was enjoyable, logical, & made me incorrectly guess who the killer was.
34 reviews
November 7, 2017
Fun read

Carolyn Well's stories are compelling. They are hard to put down. I love learning new words that are used in her writings.
1 review
August 7, 2018
The Chain

Excellent detective story! Very well written and entertaining. Couldn't put it down. Need more writers like Miss Wells More please!
Displaying 1 - 30 of 43 reviews

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