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Le Cafe Singe Bleu Serving generous portions of history and mystery from our monthly menu Volume 1, Issue 1: January 1, 2003 |
| The Cape Cod Mystery Phoebe Atwood Taylor 1998
Detectives: Asey Mayo Should you read this book? Oui! | |
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Reviewed by Dorothy Emm
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The Victim
The Sleuth
The Suspects
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Interested parties Cape Cod. The legendary Eastern United States summering place. Located at the southeast corner of Massachusetts, it�s a sixty-five mile length of land extending out into the ocean, curving upward in the shape of a hook, or a man flexing his arm. It is a mile wide at its thinnest point, and 20 miles wide at its thickest. The beautiful long, sandy beaches call summer visitors to it, and although the land is practically barren otherwise, the native Cape Codders make a living from the teeming waters surrounding them, and from the visitors who come every summer to fill the hotels and rent the cottages. Miss Prudence Whitsby and her niece Betsy are two of these perennial Cape Cod visitors. This summer they acquired a cottage �that neither leaks or squeaks, two virtues which summer vacationists will recognize as paramount.� In addition, they were �entranced by the truly spacious living room and its mammoth fire place�the view was the best in town, for the cottage was perched on the flat top of a sandy, bayberry-bush-covered hill from which we could see the greater part of Cape Cod Bay�there were no near neighbors�a hundred and fifty feet away was a converted..rough one room cabin.� When the newspapers report that a heat wave has hit the Eastern cities, the two women invite a couple of their friends down for the weekend. Young and vivacious Dorothy Cram is a college friend of Betsy�s, while large, lovable and recently widowed Emma Manton is a life long friend of the elder Miss Whitsby. One reason why the Whitsby�s enjoy their summer vacations so much is their long-time friendship with the wealthy Porter family. (The Whitsbys are not paupers themselves.) Bill Porter, the younger son, toils not, neither does he spin, but he�s known Betsy for twenty years, and is rather in love with her. The only �leak and squeak� to mar their perfect vacation is that someone has rented the cabin a little way away from their cottage, thus marring their privacy. It is the well known novelist, Dale Sanborn, who specializes in �exposes,� in taking the characters and situations in his book from real life. His most famous book is something which the critics called the greatest expose of married life in America (Prudence Whitsby once tried to read it � she got through 40 pages before giving up, finding it rather nasty) and he has made a present to the Whitsby�s of an advance copy of his current novel, called Reverence. Mr. Sanborn has rented that converted cabin for the rest of the season, but he doesn�t survive that long. In fact, he doesn�t survive on the Cape for more than two days. In that time, he�d managed to make a few enemies. He�d made a pass at Betsy, who spurned him. He�d run over Bill Porter�s valuable show dog, and left him to die in the road. And he�d broken off his engagement to Dorothy Cram, rather callously. That�s not all. Two of the Whitsby�s other friends, a happily married couple until something to do with Sanborn had caused them to divorce, have shown up on the Cape. And Sanborn�s brother, who had good cause to hate him, is there as well�and who knows how many other people had read the papers that told them the famous novelist Dale Sanborn was summering in Cape Cod? But it�s Bill Porter who is arrested by the police for the blunt-object murder of the despicable Sanborn, and it�s Porter handy man and general dogsbody Asey Mayo who decides to find out the truth. Asey Mayo takes his place in the ranks of the colorful detectives of the Thirties. Prudence Whitsby describes him:
This review uploaded December 24, 2002. |
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