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The Seat of the Scornful (1941)

by John Dickson Carr

Series: Doctor Gideon Fell (14)

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2175125,774 (3.63)4
"First published in 1942, this reissue of one of Carr's most highly rated mysteries featuring series detective Gideon Fell offers readers a tense and enjoyable game of cat and mouse between the detective and the chief suspect. 'The supreme conjuror; the king of the art of misdirection ... once you begin a book of his, you simply cannot put it down.' -- Agatha Christie on John Dickson Carr When the police arrive at the holiday bungalow of the haughty Justice Ireton to find a man killed by gunshot and the high court judge brandishing a pistol, the case seems as straightforward as it is scandalous. Yet, with the incongruous assemblage of physical evidence, the judge's denial of any participation in the crime and the recent events of his daughter's love life combined, the deceptively simple case is soon steeped in complexity. At a loss in the bizarre circumstances, the local force calls in the larger-than-life sleuth Dr Gideon Fell, who just the previous day had been contending with Ireton's intellect over a game of chess. With Fell and the judge now facing off as detective and suspect, a new battle of wits begins in this fiendishly plotted masterclass of the mystery genre"--… (more)
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Showing 5 of 5
good illustration of giving books a second chance; skipped a few pages and was hooked - great ending! ( )
  Overgaard | Jan 19, 2024 |
A brilliant read, though I have to admit to being a fan of John Dickson Carr, though some of his were ordinary!

This book featured one of Carr's famous amatuer dectitive's being Dr Gideon Fell, who was a close friend of the most obvious suspect, a judge no less who is known to be harsh on criminals.

In a remote sea side cottage, a death occurs and the Judge, based solely on the facts is immediately suspected (as a matter of logic, but really?)

There are many to's and fro's and there master reveal in the last 6 lines (of my edition).

Would you do that in similar circumstances?

Please read

Big Ship

4 July 2023 ( )
  bigship | Jul 4, 2023 |
A severe judge finds himself accused of shooting his daughter's unwelcome fiance, who may not have been as bad a fellow as the judge believed. Less in the way of heavy gothic atmosphere than many Fell stories, which is all to the good --set in an ordinary seaside cottage. ( )
1 vote antiquary | Sep 3, 2014 |
Number 103
  chilperic | Dec 20, 2022 |
Title page wanting. ( )
  ME_Dictionary | Mar 19, 2020 |
Showing 5 of 5
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"First published in 1942, this reissue of one of Carr's most highly rated mysteries featuring series detective Gideon Fell offers readers a tense and enjoyable game of cat and mouse between the detective and the chief suspect. 'The supreme conjuror; the king of the art of misdirection ... once you begin a book of his, you simply cannot put it down.' -- Agatha Christie on John Dickson Carr When the police arrive at the holiday bungalow of the haughty Justice Ireton to find a man killed by gunshot and the high court judge brandishing a pistol, the case seems as straightforward as it is scandalous. Yet, with the incongruous assemblage of physical evidence, the judge's denial of any participation in the crime and the recent events of his daughter's love life combined, the deceptively simple case is soon steeped in complexity. At a loss in the bizarre circumstances, the local force calls in the larger-than-life sleuth Dr Gideon Fell, who just the previous day had been contending with Ireton's intellect over a game of chess. With Fell and the judge now facing off as detective and suspect, a new battle of wits begins in this fiendishly plotted masterclass of the mystery genre"--

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Judge Horace Ireton is proud of the fact that he administers absolute, impartial justice without a drop of mercy. At the end of the Westshire spring assizes, he sentences a man to death with all due ceremony--the square of black silk on his wig, the ominous roll of words that end: "...and there be hanged by the neck until you are dead. And may God have mercy on your soul." Then he decides to take a short vacation in his bungalow by the sea. He challenges the eccentric Dr. Fell to a chess match as part of his R&R program, and in pops the judge's daughter and announces that she is engaged to be married--and not to the dried stick of a barrister whom her father had hand-picked for her.
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