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Death at hallows End
 
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Death at hallows End [Hardcover]

Leo Bruce
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Hardcover CDN $25.38  
Hardcover, 1965 --  
Paperback CDN $13.51  

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3.0 out of 5 stars CLASSIC DETECTION, Nov 4 2003
By 
charles falk (Novato, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Death At Hallows End (Hardcover)
Although this book was just published for the first time here in the US, it was written in 1965. Its style and its hero, Carolus Deene, hark back to an even earlier time -- when gentleman sleuths like Sherlock Holmes, Lord Peter Wimsey, and Doctor Gideon Fell solved mysteries for the sheer intellectual challenge they posed. Deene, independently wealthy, teaches history at Queen's School in the city of "Newminster" to quiet his conscience and gets involved in murder investigations for recreation.

A solicitor he knows slightly vanishes while on a business trip to the remote village of Hallows End. He'd gone there to deliver a will to an important client for signing. By odd coincidence, the client, who was visiting relatives, apparently dies of a heart attack on the same night his lawyer disappears. Carolus is asked to find out what has become of the missing solicitor.

Leo Bruce, a pen name of the late Rupert Croft-Cooke, scatters suspects, false scents, and mysterious events before the reader with gleeful abandon. Some of the characters are straight from central casting, like the pompous headmaster of Queen's School and Deene's housekkeper who cooks "chocolate suffle" and "patty mason" for his supper, but the suspects are a diverse and eccentric lot who defy easy stereotyping. The book is a good read for those who enjoy a classic mystery of deduction. Few readers are likely to come up with the full solution before Deene explains all in the final pages.

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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars CLASSIC DETECTION, Nov 4 2003
By charles falk - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Death At Hallows End (Hardcover)
Although this book was just published for the first time here in the US, it was written in 1965. Its style and its hero, Carolus Deene, hark back to an even earlier time -- when gentleman sleuths like Sherlock Holmes, Lord Peter Wimsey, and Doctor Gideon Fell solved mysteries for the sheer intellectual challenge they posed. Deene, independently wealthy, teaches history at Queen's School in the city of "Newminster" to quiet his conscience and gets involved in murder investigations for recreation.

A solicitor he knows slightly vanishes while on a business trip to the remote village of Hallows End. He'd gone there to deliver a will to an important client for signing. By odd coincidence, the client, who was visiting relatives, apparently dies of a heart attack on the same night his lawyer disappears. Carolus is asked to find out what has become of the missing solicitor.

Leo Bruce, a pen name of the late Rupert Croft-Cooke, scatters suspects, false scents, and mysterious events before the reader with gleeful abandon. Some of the characters are straight from central casting, like the pompous headmaster of Queen's School and Deene's housekkeper who cooks "chocolate suffle" and "patty mason" for his supper, but the suspects are a diverse and eccentric lot who defy easy stereotyping. The book is a good read for those who enjoy a classic mystery of deduction. Few readers are likely to come up with the full solution before Deene explains all in the final pages.


1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Leo Bruce is just the sort of author who would have made Agatha Christie proud, Oct 13 2008
By Midwest Book Review - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Death at Hallows End (Paperback)
Leo Bruce is the pen name used by Rupert Croft-Cooke, who lived between 1903 and 1979. Bruce wrote two separate mystery series: the Sergeant Beef series, which was published between 1937-1952, and the Carolus Deene mysteries, written between 1955-1974. Croft-Cooke also wrote a book of short stories under his own name. Bruce's Carolus Deene is a school teacher who solves mysteries in his spare time.

It is almost time for another school term when Carolus Deene is summoned by the solicitor Lionel Thripp, whose partner Duncan Humby has disappeared while delivering a will to be signed to an old man who thought he would never die and who didn't particularly like his own family. By coincidence James Grossiter is also dead, leaving his fortune to his two nephews, Holroyd and Cyril Neast. There is rumor of an illegitimate son names Hickmansworth. They farm neighboring pieces of land. Grossiter went to Hallows End, the home of his nephews, just before his death. Are these deaths just a coincidence? And where has Humby gotten to? It is up to Carolus Deene to sort through several layers of smokescreens put up by the families to get at the truth:

"Yes, it was possible for a car to be in to the side here and for another car to pass it. But only just. If Duncan Humby was still at the wheel of his car when it stopped here, he must have deliberately pulled it in to leave room for others. There was no sign of any wheel tracks on the grass edges, but that meant nothing, for it had rained since. If there had been anything of the sort, presumably the police would have seen it when they were first informed. He was accustomed to coming too late into an investigation for that sort of evidence and knew that it was not, in any case, his strong point."

Leo Bruce is just the sort of author who would have made Agatha Christie proud. Not only does he write "whodunits" that are nearly impossible to fathom, but he does it with a relaxed style that is as relaxing to read as it is confounding. Bruce's books no double had an impact at the time he wrote them, just as Hollywood was tuning in to how much fun the guessing game could be. Leo Bruce was a masterful writer.

Shelley Glodowski
Senior Reviewer
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