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Roderick Alleyn Mysteries: "Nursing Home Murder", "Death in a White Tie", "Final Curtain"
 
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Roderick Alleyn Mysteries: "Nursing Home Murder", "Death in a White Tie", "Final Curtain" [Hardcover]

Ngaio Marsh
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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'Continues to be one of Ngaio's most popular novels, and has outstripped all her other titles in sales.' MARGARET LEWIS 'Ngaio Marsh transforms the detective story from a mere puzzle into a novel.' DAILY EXPRESS 'She is astoundingly good.' DAILY EXPRESS 'The finest writer in the English language of the pure, classical puzzle whodunnit. Among the crime queens, Ngaio Marsh stands out as an Empress.' THE SUN --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Book Description

Sir John Phillips, the Harley Street surgeon, and his beautiful nurse Jane Harden are almost too nervous to operate. The emergency case on the table before them is the Home Secretary – and they both have very good, personal reasons to wish him dead. Within hours he does die, although the operation itself was a complete success, and Chief Detective Inspector Alleyn must find out why… --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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3.0 out of 5 stars So-So, Dec 10 2001
By 
Gary F. Taylor "GFT" (Biloxi, MS USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
When a political leader meets unexpected death during emergency surgery, Inspector Allen must determine whether the murder is politically motivated or purely personal. Marsh creates a more deliberately detection-oriented plot than usually found in her work; all the same, THE NURSING HOME MURDER is largely lacking in the wit that generally illuminates Marsh's finest work, and as such the novel seems a bit slow and dry. Long time fans will enjoy it, but newcomers would do well to select a livelier work.
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Amazon.com: 4.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Marsh Hits Her Stride, Mar 9 2005
By Gary F. Taylor "GFT" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Nursing Home Murder (Mass Market Paperback)
Ngaio Marsh is among the great mystery novelists of the 20th Century--but like many another writer she went through an aprentice period. Both A MAN LAY DEAD and ENTER A MURDER were fairly well received when they were published in the early 1930s, but it wasn't until the 1935 publication of THE NURSING HOME MURDER that the reading public began to take notice.

England's Home Secretary is on the eve of both important political watersheds and not a few personal developments when he is suddenly taken ill and rushed into surgery. But what should be a simple operation finds him dead on the table, and at least two two of those in attendance had good reason to wish him out of the picture. Inspector Alleyn has his hands full with doctors, nurses, lawyers and such--and just possibly a political assassin lurking in the background.

This is the first Marsh novel in which Inspector Alleyn truly emerges as a memorable personality--and in which Marsh begins to show her talent for both characterization and setting. The plot is also quite striking, and medical technology aside the novel has a remarkably modern feel. Marsh would go on to do better works, but that doesn't undercut this particular title, which is quite fine. Recommended.

GFT, Amazon Reviewer

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A VERY GOOD PUZZLE TO TEST YOUR WITS--WITH EXTRA VALUE ADDED, Nov 19 2010
By David R. Eastwood - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Nursing Home Murder (Hardcover)
With technical assistance from Dr. H. Jellett, Ngaio March produced this good Puzzle story for readers to test their wits with--setting it in a "nursing home," where people rightfully expect to be helped by the staff, not murdered by any of them.

The title, THE NURSING HOME MURDER, probably will confuse most U.S. readers, who associate the term "nursing home" with the places that elderly people are put so that they can have professional nursing care 24/7. In the U.K., however, the term has a very different meaning--here in Marsh's detective novel, it refers to a small private hospital where surgery is performed.

When a high-ranking British government official dies shortly after an emergency operation, Marsh's series detective, Roderick Alleyn (pronounced "Allen"), receives suspicious information from the man's widow and agrees that the matter ought to be investigated fully. It soon is clear that the dead man was given a fatal overdose of medicine by somebody, either right before or during the surgery. And so, chapter by chapter, Inspector Alleyn interviews everyone associated with the case--and three main suspects quickly come to light.

Are you clever when it comes to spotting clues and weighing evidence? Are you good at assessing people's personalities? Perhaps you can solve this case before Inspector Alleyn does.

For the most part, Marsh plays fair with readers, and you have a good chance of getting at least 85% of the solution right. A few things ARE withheld, and even Alleyn admits that luck played a part in his getting the evidence he needed. Since this can be seen as a flaw in the story, perhaps it is why I've rated this book 4 stars instead of 5.

Otherwise, on the plus side, Marsh provides us with an interesting cast of well-developed characters--AND she occasionally has some of them say amusing things.

If you happen to buy the hardback copy published by Aeonian Press in 1977, be warned that it has many typos of all sorts. Perhaps you can consider that as an extra cryptographic challenge to your brain: adding in correct punctuation (or removing excess punctuation), decoding or replacing words that are incorrect in several ways, adding missing words (or deleting excess ones), etc. etc. etc.

3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars 4.5 stars--Alleyn & Bathgate mystery, Mar 27 2009
By Neal J. Pollock - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Nursing Home Murder (Mass Market Paperback)
This is a nice little mystery which will keep you guessing--in parallel with Chief Inspector Alleyn--until almost the end. It includes several references to Marsh's two prior mysteries A Man Lay Dead & Enter a Murderer. There are tons of potential murderers & motives galore--even some Bolsheviks (as in a previous work)--with Alleyn's highly enjoyable repartee with his Boswell, journalist Nigel Bathgate & his fiancée Angela North. While it's a fairly short work, it's satisfying, quite good, but perhaps not Marsh's best--which is very good indeed. This novel has been anthologized in at least two Marsh collections:
The Roderick Alleyn Mysteries: The Nursing Home Murder; Death in a White Tie; Final Curtain &
BOX SET "Four of Her Finest": The Nursing Home Murder / Colour Scheme / Dead Water / Spinsters in Jeopardy.

Best of all, it demonstrates Marsh's almost unequalled style & humorous observations. My favorites are:
p. 11: so maddeningly remote. Their very embraces were masked in a chilly patina of good form. He supposed he had married her in a brief wave of enthusiasm for polar exploration.
p. 112: [Journalist Bathgate]--"Do you read crime fiction?" [Chief Inspector Alleyn]--"I dote on it. It's such a relief to escape from one's work into an entirely different atmosphere."
p. 159: It gave her an uncanny resemblance to something human.

It's also interesting that Marsh quotes Shakespeare: p. 139: "By the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes" since Agatha Christie published a mystery entitled By The Pricking Of My Thumbs (Tommy and Tuppence) & Ray Bradbury published Something Wicked This Way Comes.

[page #'s are from the 1963 copyright but probably the same as this one]
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 4 reviews  4.2 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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