
Jean Potts (1910–1999)
Author of Death of a Stray Cat
About the Author
Works by Jean Potts
Associated Works
The Best of Mystery: 63 Short Stories Chosen by the Master of Suspense (1982) — Contributor — 425 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1910
- Date of death
- 1999-11-10
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Nebraska Wesleyan University
St Paul High School - Occupations
- novelist
journalist - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- St. Paul, Nebraska, USA
- Places of residence
- New York, New York, USA
- Place of death
- Manhattan, New York, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- New York, USA
Members
Reviews
Lew, the oppressive and hated patriarch who is also the big man around town, you know he is going to die, but how, when, and who?
But first, the book expertly leads you through all the whys, with each chapter from the perspective of his relations. Each character is realistically drawn, their personalities and inner lives adding a new interpretation on the first chapter from Lew's viewpoint.
The layering is really magnificently and sympathetically done, with the tension ratcheting ominously. show more The central "mystery" is only for the reader and the overall unusual structure was perfect.
Potts had won an Edgar Award for her first novel and if this later book is anything to go by, I can see why. I must hunt down her other books. show less
But first, the book expertly leads you through all the whys, with each chapter from the perspective of his relations. Each character is realistically drawn, their personalities and inner lives adding a new interpretation on the first chapter from Lew's viewpoint.
The layering is really magnificently and sympathetically done, with the tension ratcheting ominously. show more The central "mystery" is only for the reader and the overall unusual structure was perfect.
Potts had won an Edgar Award for her first novel and if this later book is anything to go by, I can see why. I must hunt down her other books. show less
A cast of characters converges on a seaside resort which becomes the scene of a murder. Potts offer up her suspects (and rules out most of them immediately) but this was never a taxing mystery. The thrill came from the different perspectives, giving the reader insights into each character's motivations, as well as revealing to us the hilarious disconnection between how a character thinks they're being perceived and how they were actually perceived by the other characters. The characters show more themselves were middling. We have a few couples that seem worn down by life in general, heightened by the melodrama of being in a mystery. The addition of Emerson the snot was an interesting authorial decision, may he grow up to be better adjusted and have less of a god complex. I would love a spinoff on Margaret getting to live her newly independent life, away from all other characters here. show less
Fern Villard was the only good secretary Harry Dudgeon ever had, and someone had the nerve to murder her - at the office! Harry (nicknamed High), the editor of the fishing magazine The Compleat Angler, and Louise Clarke, his editorial assistant, start delving into the murder when the police arrest Max Sutter, Fern's office romance. I especially liked the details of office life in 1965, when a Xerox photocopier was the latest technology. A short, fun read.
This book was great. It kept me in suspense up through the very last few pages, in spite of all my guessing.
Lists
Edgar Award (1)
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 23
- Also by
- 13
- Members
- 154
- Popularity
- #135,794
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 7
- ISBNs
- 27
- Languages
- 1




