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"Among all of Carr's ingenious crime scenes, the present case is one of his best known: a dead man is found strangled in the middle of a clay tennis court, just after a storm. In the damp dirt, there is one set of footsteps -- his own -- leading back to the grass; the court is otherwise untouched. There are no trees above from which the body may have fallen and no other visible means by which it may have been transported to its final resting place. Before determining the perpetrator of the show more strangulation, the local authorities are first confronted by the utter implausibility of the location -- two interlocking questions puzzling enough to stump even the most seasoned inspector. The bafflement is reaching a harried volley by the time amateur sleuth Dr. Gideon Fell gets involved, but he soon shows that the knotted plot is no match for his deductive powers. Before he can serve up a dazzling explanation of whodunnit, though, Fell will have to sort through a confounding set of clues in search of a diabolical killer and a bizarre murder method." -- show lessTags
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Member Reviews
The “impossible crime” and its solution are fine in this novel. The secondary plot, involving peripheral characters, is well-developed.
But it’s not my favorite Carr book by any means. Dr. Dell enters rather late in the story. There’s something I can’t quite put my finger on that just makes the story both weak and derivative.
Maybe I’ve been spoiled by reading far too many mysteries.
But it’s not my favorite Carr book by any means. Dr. Dell enters rather late in the story. There’s something I can’t quite put my finger on that just makes the story both weak and derivative.
Maybe I’ve been spoiled by reading far too many mysteries.
Carr is famous for "locked room" mysteries --this mystery is set on a tennis court but achieves a similar effect --only one set of footprints leads to the victim's corpse, none lead away.
Carr is US writer, but story set in England. Body in center of tennis court with no footsteps leading away. Not really convinced by the solution.
This mediocre JDC features the most obliging murder victim in all of detective fiction.
mmmmmmh... non si dovrebbero leggere per la prima volta i grandi classici quando si è già letto di tutto. su Carr e la Christie ci si deve formare: l'avessi letto 20 anni fa mi avrebbe fatto molto più effetto di quel che mi ha fatto oggi.
ingegnoso, ben scritto, bei personaggi però...
- su quella che poi si sarebbe rivelata "l'arma" del delitto ci ho rimuginato su per mezzo libro chiedendomi come mai nessuno la citasse: diventa un particolare che è noto al lettore ma che volutamente l'autore vuol far dimenticare;
- la modalità del delitto è fattibile, ma la tempistica secondo me è improponibile;
- all'assassino ci arrivi ben presto grazie alle descrizioni della psicologia dei personaggi, quando ti spiegano il "come"ha agito show more sorgono delle inevitabili perplessità;
- oggi come oggi una riportare una conversazione piena di voluti omississ tanto per guadagnare un capitolo non sarebbe ritenuto accettabile. show less
ingegnoso, ben scritto, bei personaggi però...
- su quella che poi si sarebbe rivelata "l'arma" del delitto ci ho rimuginato su per mezzo libro chiedendomi come mai nessuno la citasse: diventa un particolare che è noto al lettore ma che volutamente l'autore vuol far dimenticare;
- la modalità del delitto è fattibile, ma la tempistica secondo me è improponibile;
- all'assassino ci arrivi ben presto grazie alle descrizioni della psicologia dei personaggi, quando ti spiegano il "come"ha agito show more sorgono delle inevitabili perplessità;
- oggi come oggi una riportare una conversazione piena di voluti omississ tanto per guadagnare un capitolo non sarebbe ritenuto accettabile. show less
Jul 31, 2012Italian
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Author Information

229+ Works 18,931 Members
John Dickson Carr, the master of locked room mysteries, was born in Uniontown, Pennsylvania, in 1906. He was educated at Haverford College and the Sorbonne in Paris. Carr is a prolific writer with more than 80 novels and collections of short stories to his credit. He began his writing career at the age of 26 with his first published novel, It show more Walks At Night. Some of his most popular works are The Three Coffins (1935), The Burning Coat (1937), and The Bride of Newgate (1951). Carr also collaborated with Adrian Doyle, the son of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in The Exploits of Sherlock Holmes (1954). Carr met his wife in 1932 and settled in England in 1933. He was drafted by the United States military in World War II, and was ordered to remain in England and work with the BBC. He lived in many cities throughout the world until 1967, when he permanently moved to Greenville, South Carolina. John Dickson Carr also wrote mystery novels under the name Carter Dickson. He died in Greenville in 1977. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- Som av en osynlig hand
- Original publication date
- 1939
- People/Characters
- Dr. Gideon Fell; Superintendent Hadley; Frank Dorrance; Brenda White; Hugh Rowland; Dr. Nicholas Young (Old Nick) (show all 9); Kitty Bancroft; Madge Sturgess; Arthur Chandler
- First words
- She sat on a couch at one end of the long, dusky drawing-room.
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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- 260
- Popularity
- 124,183
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (3.31)
- Languages
- 8 — Dutch, English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian (Bokmål), Swedish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 15
- ASINs
- 13





























































