- Paperback
- Publisher: Intl Polygonics Ltd (October 1987)
- Language: English
- ISBN-10: 0930330706
- ISBN-13: 978-0930330705
- Product Dimensions: 17.3 x 10.7 x 1.5 cm
- Shipping Weight: 136 g
- Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #1,806,582 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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I have been recently reading and reviewing the early Ellery Queen stories written in the 1930s. Drury Lane's Last case exhibits elements common to that period including slang (ten spot, smackers, simoleons, green boys) supposedly spoken by the criminal underclass, rather gruff and forceful police tactics, and a chaste love affair between a modern young woman (Inspector Thumm's daughter) and her young man.
We met Patience Thumm in the The Tragedy of Z and I was a little impatient with her character in my previous Drury Lane review. I am apparently becoming a bit soft-hearted and I now find myself appreciating her contributions to the plot. I am impressed with her quick mind and deductive ability. I may need to revisit The Tragedy of Z.
The Drury Lane mysteries were written as contemporary fiction and I remained alert for cultural and technological references to the 1930s. For example, an alibi was solid as it was obviously impossible to cross the Atlantic in one day. A detectograph is apparently some forerunner of the tape recorder. We encounter rush telegrams rather than cell phones. A holograph has nothing to do with holograms; it is a written signature. The word telephone is being shortened to phone. The term holocaust describes a damaging fire, nothing more.
I don't normally subscribe to the necessity of reading stories in order, but I do recommend beginning with The Tragedy of X and concluding with Drury Lane's Last Case. The early Ellery Queen mysteries are not easy to find, especially the Drury Lane stories. They do exist as Ellery Queen was hugely popular from the 1930s through the 1960s. Reprinted paperback editions from the 1970s are still floating about. I keep expecting to see anniversary reprints. Whatever sleuthing efforts are necessary to find these classics, I am certain that you will be aptly rewarded.
The story started with a strange looking man and later extended to an uncommon book stealing event. The reader would discover that they were linked together and after three-quarters of the book, it would be clear who was the thief and why he committed such a crime. But was it the end? No. There was an unforgettable twist in the end one would remember for a while.