
The most baffling mystery ever encountered by Ellery Queen, the one he couldn't solve even though he knew the answer. On the 8th night of Christmas your true love sends to you a head with one closed eye--a warning you will die... A gay Christmas party in a snowbound mansion turns grim when a guest begins sending anonymous gifts to his hosts. The presents are mysterious, the messages accompanying them cryptic, but the meaning behind it all is very clear. It is a slow, deliberate warning of murder--scheduled to arrive on the 12th night with the final gift--the finishing stroke "Queen has combined memory and research to create a detailed and delightfully accurate picture of America at the end of the 1920's ... and how good it is to be back there and then." -The New York Times- Lee and Dannay almost certainly intended their 30th novel, The Finishing Stroke, to be their last (as even the title suggests). They had both begun to feel that with the advance of technology in the science of criminology the traditional sleuth was no longer a necessity. It would be more difficult now to come up with plots where Ellery's reasoning process would be needed. It reached back to his "second" case (actually his third).
Still one of my personal favorites since we've been served a much more
likeable (fallible) Ellery. The first story I got to read and thanks to the playfulness of
the plot, the many clues and the way all characters seemed suspect my addiction became a
fact. One of my personal favorites only surpassed by some of the earlier works. I
got to re-reading it and it didn't quiet live up to my expectations. Sure, the playfulness
still is there and the way the 'number 12-theme' is interwoven with all suspects is very
enjoyable... But the plot is very straightforward. Without the 30 years-span it surely
would have lost some of its appeal. One wonders how John Sebastian could expect his guests
to remain for twelve-days in a house stricken by bad luck and other 'unpleasantness', I
really can't imagine. The fact that a body was found and everyone had to stay
made
the plot come to bloom. The climax is thoroughly Queen and lifts this story out of the
ordinary. The final solution does stretch the rules of fair-play a bit and the way the
initial body is 'explained' leaves me somewhat unfulfilled. Still for Queen-fans several
other things make this a remarkable book. The book contrasts to most of the other works by
using exact dates (years) and reference to recognizable 'historic' accurances. Beginning
in Ellery's youth in 1929 and ending with his finally solving the case in late middle age
in 1958. This gives the story some 'epic' proportions. It not only describes the birth of
the male protagonist in 1905 but the cousins must have included some hints to their own background. The first part takes us to Rye. In the second part Ellery
passes to
Westchester, Mount Kidron, Mammaroneck, White Plains to Alderwood.
(White Plains where Frederic Dannay died). Ellery whistles 'Greensleeves' and frequently quotes in Latin. |
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