at
of Many Tails (1949)
The silent rush of
footsteps, the muffled shriek, the ever-tightening noose of exotic silk...the mark of the
Cat. The Cat had claimed Number Nine. The Cat had 9 kills, but Ellery Queen found Number
Ten alive, and offered the victim temptingly to the killer. The trap was baited, and
Ellery and the police poised for the strike that had to come. But the strangler struck
elsewhere. Queen's heart chilled at the thought of what he would find.
A departure for EQ: more of a manhunt than a mystery, although with a neat twist.
And there's that extraordinary sequence with Ellery and the psychiatrist. TV-Movie
(simplified): "Ellery
Queen: Don't Look Behind You."

ouble, double
(1950)
aka
he Case of the Seven Murders (1958)
Ellery returned to Wrightsville to solve the
mystery of: A rich man (believed poor) who died of "old age." A poor man
(believed rich) who committed suicide. A scholarly drunk who disappeared. And shortly it
occurred to Queen that the puzzle had a pattern. A twisted mind was committing murder
according to an old nursery rhyme! Doctor, lawyer, merchant, chief...and to at least one
person in town, the chief was Ellery Queen!
The last full-fledged Wrightsville story is as usual strong on characterizations.
But some of the deductions made from the clues seem more speculative than logical. |