In the Best Families

by Rex Stout

Paperback, 1995

Publication

Bantam (1995), Edition: Later Printing, 272 pages

Original publication date

1950

Description

Fiction. Mystery. Suspense. Thriller. HTML:The aging millionairess has a problem: where is her young playboy husband getting all his money? To help find the answer, Archie infiltrates a party at her palatial estate. But her late-night murder ruins the festive mood . . . and a letter bomb from a powerful crime boss makes Nero Wolfe do the unthinkable�??run for his life. Suddenly Archie finds himself on his own, trying to find a killer without the help of his old mentor. For to all appearances, Wolfe has vanished. The career of the world�??s most famous detective has ended in cowardice and disgrace . . . or has it? Introduction by Patricia Sprinkle   �??It is always a treat to read a Nero Wolfe mystery. The man has entered our folklore.�?��??The New York Times Book Review   A grand master of the form, Rex Stout is one of America�??s greatest mystery writers, and his literary creation Nero Wolfe is one of the greatest fictional detectives of all time. Together, Stout and Wolfe have entertained�??and puzzled�??millions of mystery fans around the world. Now, with his perambulatory man-about-town, Archie Goodwin, the arrogant, gourmandizing, sedentary sleuth is back in the original seventy-three cases of crime and detection written by the inimitable ma… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member dbsovereign
One of my favorite by Stout as it shows Wolfe and Archie out of their normal element. Wolfe, the detective who never leaves his house, disappears in the face of threats from some kind of mafia boss. Archie is, as ever, the stalwart trusty sidekick, who presses on despite feeling abandoned by Wolfe.
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His devotion and the lengths that Wolfe goes to to try to resolve things is truly remarkable. Archie's narration is filled with humor and his borderline transgressive attitude with the clients and the authorities makes this into a fun-filled romp. Archie shows us what it means to "not suffer fools."
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LibraryThing member MrsLee
Good story, one of the better ones I think. I like the wrap-up of the Zeck trilogy. Lots of Archie.
LibraryThing member wfzimmerman
The best of the best. My favorite scene is Wolfe telling Goodwin "I am a B."
LibraryThing member tzelman
One of the best. Nero's retirement, Archie's private practice, infiltrating Zeck's organization
LibraryThing member teckelvik
I picked this up because the Nero Wolfe librarythng group had a thread on Archie, and this was mentioned as one of his best showings. Indeed it was! Five months on his own, and doing quite well for himself. I was amused that it didn't take him long to be making more as an independent than he made
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with Wolfe, yet there was no question that he would close down his shop and go back to being the legs of the outfit.

In general, I find that the Nero Wolfe books all run together. I don't remember plots or characters from one time to the next. I have half a dozen or so that I keep on hand for just that reason - I find they are the perfect read when I need something to read.

The exception to this is Archie Goodwin. I love Archie. In a perfect world, I would marry Archie. Or maybe just date him for years, I haven't decided. But he is always number one on my list of "Fictional Characters You Love."

Oh, I added dogs to the tags just because there are dogs, and Nero gives a wonderful speech about their loyalty and love, and that turns out to be the key to the mystery.
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LibraryThing member MusicMom41
This is one that is difficult to describe without giving too much away. Fantastic fiction describes the set up well: “Mrs. Barry Rackham, arriving at Wolfe's old Brownstone in Manhattan, is like a duchess diving into a hockshop. The woman is neurotic - so neurotic that she'll pay $10,000 to know
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where her husband's money comes from.”

This novel takes a turn that is quite unexpected—even though it has been foreshadowed in previous books. I think it is one of the best in the series. Besides Wolfe and Archie the only other regular character that has a big role in the story is Lily Rowen. If you catch the clue that gives the solution to the murder as I did, don’t forget about it as the story unfolds because there is a lot going on in this story and Stout is a master at diverting your attention. This is number 16 in the series and one of the strongest, IMO. Highly recommended for fans
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LibraryThing member jburlinson
It's hard to recommend any book that you've read within the last ten years, yet can't recall anything but the name of the client. As I sit here racking my memory, a little more comes back to me. I think Wolfe loses a whole lot of weight, isn't that right?
LibraryThing member mmyoung
As is usually true of trilogies and denouements of the Moriarty Gambit this book didn’t quite deliver all that was promised in the lead up.
Warnings: many spoilers to follow.

On the purely “I figured things out before Wolfe/Goodwin revealed it” front I nailed Leeds as at least involved with
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Zeck by the time Zeck called the house post sausage warning. After the detailed description of the dogs and their reactions to Goodwin my first question after the murder itself was “how did the murderer get so close to Mrs. Rackham” and my second was “why aren’t the police checking everyone for dog bites?” On one level this made it believable that Wolfe was able to deduce who the murderer was. On another level it makes the police and Goodwin seem extraordinarily stupid.

On the second front, the believability of Wolfe worming his way into the world of Zeck I was completely unwilling to swallow the idea. The number of reasons why this was unlikely are many: Wolfe was a very overweight man and Roeder a man who had extraneous flesh hanging from his face, surely any criminal mastermind would have found that interesting if not suspicious; Zeck would have done background checks on anyone who rose to the level of a “D”and Roeder had no existence prior do the disappearance of Wolfe, again setting off warning bells; after several speeches from Wolfe about the degree to which a series of cut-outs meant that Zeck could not be connected to any actual crimes Zeck is rather forthcoming about his involvement in crimes to someone as low as a “B” (Goodwin); Wolfe, he tells us, got the attention of Zeck by inventing a new way of fleecing people and yet there is no discussion after Zeck is killed of whether those people are recompensed or indeed whether Goodwin or Wolfe feel the need for that; Zeck’s fortress of solitude was easily breached and his entire criminal enterprise collapses on the death of its leader without any explanation of how that would happen; and finally there is no discussion of the fact that even if Zeck is dead there are many underworld (and even overworld) people who would welcome the death of Wolfe for bringing down the Zeck empire and possibly exposing dangerous information to the world.

I was cheering for this book but found it stretched my credulity to the limit. If Lily Rowan was able to figure out that Roeder was Wolfe then so should have Saul at least and perhaps Fred and Orrie. If the Roeder gambit had been played out over a longer period of time, let us say 2 or 3 years, it might have been more believable but as it was it was a very mundane working out to what had been a great setup.

Other comments: while it was a nice detail to have them use Lily Rowan as “the girl” when they needed a reason for Roeder to be out of contact for several hours it again stretches credulity that Zeck wouldn’t have run a background check on her. Rown, we are told in many books, is a well known heiress and frequenter of the New York social scene. This would bring up a problem because her background would indicate that she didn’t spend nights with anonymous crminals and even more problematic would be her long term relationship with Goodwin. Since Archie had to cancel a planned trip to Norway with Rowan in order to fall in with Roeder’s plans it seems unlikely that the evening with Roeder would not have raised suspicion. It could have been handled by having Archie openly drop Roeder off with the suggestion that Roeder had dirt on Rowman and she was paying it off in favours than in the manner it is presented.

On the plus side, Stout’s writing seems to have returned to its prewar level. I forgive him the rather idiot murder plot since it had to be something trivially easy to work out else Wolfe would not have been able to unravel it by long distance and without investigations.
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LibraryThing member MaryWJ
a very unusual Nero Wolf mystery! He leaves his house...
LibraryThing member sonofcarc
Excellent job by mmyoung of setting out the underlying preposterousness of this story. Stout's stories very often fail to stand up to scrutiny. But who cares -- it's all about Archie and his inimitable voice. Stout was consciously emulating Conan Doyle (something I used to congratulate myself on
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noticing before I found out that it was like noticing that it gets light when the sun comes up). His stroke of genius, without which he would be forgotten, was the replacement of Watson with an anti-Watson. It's the mocking tone of Archie's narration that makes the books so re-readable.
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LibraryThing member wildbill
This is one of the best Nero Wolfe mysteries I have read so far. Wolfe is hired by a woman who is neurotic about being ugly to find out where her husband is getting his money since she cut him off. The series continues its' homage to Sherlock Holmes by adding a dash of Professor Moriarty. After his
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client is murdered Wolfe gets a call from Arthur Zeck with a warning not to pursue the case. A little later Archie goes out for a bit and when he comes home the door to the house is open and Wolfe is gone.
Nobody will believe that Archie doesn't know where Wolfe is even when Archie goes into business for himself with his own office and some classy business cards.
Lily Rowan does a cameo appearance, as pretty as ever. This isn't the end of the series so Wolfe does reappear with an entertaining if not terribly believable cover story. I really enjoyed the book and the ending is definitely worth the price of admission.
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LibraryThing member addunn3
Nero disappears so he can deal with a REALLY bad guy! Archie starts his own business in Nero's absence.
LibraryThing member leslie.98
The final book involving Arnold Zeck. When, after ignoring another warning from Zeck, Archie discovers Wolfe's client's murdered body, he enters the strangest case of his career. Returning to the NY brownstone, he finds that Wolfe has disappeared and arrangements made for new jobs for Fritz and
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Theodore with the only message for Archie himself a command to not look for Wolfe.

It was nice to see a brief reappearance of Lily Rowan in this book.
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LibraryThing member ritaer
Nero Wolfe's client is murdered and Wolfe, knowing crime lord is involved, disappears. Archie carries on and they triumph over crime lord and solve original murder.

Language

Original language

English

ISBN

0553277766 / 9780553277760

Physical description

272 p.; 4.24 inches

Pages

272

Rating

(188 ratings; 4.1)
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