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Ashton-Kirk is an investigator. He’s very modest and very good at investigating. He uses the unseen clues to his advantage. At least they are unseen to everybody else.
Mr. Hume is a man who everyone loves to hate, so when he is finally murdered no one seems surprised. The list of suspects is numerous.
Kirk has to summon up all his brain power to get his thoughts to work for him.
The author writes Ashton-Kirk as a young man who is very wealthy and he has a favorite friend who is his “Mr. Watson” to our young “Sherlock Holmes.”
As usual, this makes Ashton-Kirk look superior in his intelligence, which is what it is supposed to do.
Old classic detective mystery was a fun re-read. This narration was excellently done by Pete Milan (voice inflections for different characters made this NOT your average reading!) free at Librivox (Gutenberg is text only - but still free). Highly recommended for all ages.
A mystery, detective book, fun and well-executed. A bit more development of the main character would have made it a four star, without this the book remains a bit shallow.
This was a fun mystery by a new-to-me author. It definitely kept me guessing. I can see why other reviewers have compared it to Sherlock Holmes. There are definitely a lot of similarities, but there are some differences too. I plan to continue the series. (Ignore the fact that Goodreads has labeled this book as MM Romance. I don't know why in the world they placed it under that category.)
In this volume, Ashton-Kirk's Watson is a man of his own class named Pendleton, an unadventurous soul drawn unwillingly into adventure, rather like Poirot's Hastings.
I find McIntyre's amateur detective curiously colourless. And yet I quite enjoyed the unfolding of this mystery, mostly for its bizarre elements. The case opens conventionally with a woman in distress, Edyth Vale. Her beloved, Allan Morris, is somehow at the mercy of a "mocking monster", an antiquarian named Hume. Hume is murdered & Morris comes under suspicion. The murder weapon is the first bizarre element - a bayonet. Then there's a plethora of pictures of the same general, a shorthand message left in candle-wax upon the stairs, and a mysterious deaf mute scientist (who devises an explosive end for himself).
The murder is committed, it turns out, over plans for a heavier-than-air flying machine, concealed behind a portrait (the plans, not the machine!) And more than that I will not say, including any discussion of the actual murderer.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Attention Sherlock Holmes Fans! If you're on your 3rd or 30th re-read of Sir A. Conan Doyle's immortal detective, why not give his American contemporary a read? Wonderful escapist reading, perfect for a cold winter read. Ashton-Kirk is clearly an American, yet an obvious contemporary of Doyle,while the differance in English language spoken in US vs. Britan at that time period is also interesting to compair & contrast. Mostly,a cold winter night escapism was to stay out the cold & be entertained. So, my thanks to Project Gutenberg's amazing pioneering work in making ebooks available, and the others like Google who have followed.
In the years following Sherlock Holmes, dime store detective novels became wildly popular. It is always interesting to read one of Doyle's imitators and think about what set Sherlock apart from other literary private investigators. This one had the added bonus of having being proto-James Bondian, as well as Sherlockian.
A direct knockoff of Sherlock Holmes, only set in America (probably Philadelphia, the author's home) and the Holmes character is more likeable. McIntyre does an admirable job of relating this tale. It's inferred Ashton-Kirk has an inheritance; he must as he charged absolutely no fee in this case.