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They say that Lord Mantling's mansion is haunted--at least, one room of it is. Known as the Red Widow's Chamber, the now-sealed quarters once housed the wife of a guillotine operator in the French Revolution and, since her passing, have been host to a century of unsolved horrors including the death of a man in 1802, the death of a child in 1895, and a number of mysterious mortalities in the years in between. Now, in 1935, eight men and women join at the manor for a sinister experiment to show more determine the truth once and for all: they each draw a card, and whoever pulls the Ace of Spades must spend a night in the terrifying room. But the challenge turns fatal when the man selected for the task is found poisoned the next morning when the chamber is unlocked. show lessTags
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The Red Widow Murders is book three in the series featuring Sir Henry Merrivale (HM to his friends). And this one is a doosie. It seems that a group of people have gathered at the home of Lord Mantling, where nine of them draw cards to see who will spend a few hours alone in the so-called Red Widow's room, the scene of unexplained deaths going back to 1803. The cards are revealed, and it is one Mr. Bender who goes off to spend the night alone. Every fifteen minutes someone asks if he's okay, and he always answers. When time's up the other 8 people open the door, and there lies Bender, dead. But there was no way in or out of that room, and he'd been answering their queries the entire time. So how could this happen? Sir Henry Merrivale to show more the rescue, to uncover the truth.
Fun fun fun! There's something to be said about the pleasure of reading these old, vintage mystery novels, with their often elaborately-plotted crimes and solutions that even if you tried, you couldn't guess. Especially in this one, where there are a number of suspects, plenty of clues, and an equal number of red herrings left for the reader to sift through. The Red Widow Murders also offers its readers a great backstory which in and of itself is a bit chilling.
Unlike some of his other works, The Red Widow Murders isn't weighted down by a lot of archaisms, and it moves at a very nice pace. The characters are well drawn, the atmosphere is perfect, the story is a good one, and the mystery will leave you hanging until the very end. This one I can definitely recommend, especially to fans of golden-age mystery novels and of John Dickson Carr in particular. It's not a cozy novel by any stretch, and modern readers of mystery may find it a bit slow considering the fast pace of novels nowadays. However, if you are a dyed-in-the-wool fan of vintage crime, like me, it really is worth every minute you put into it. show less
Fun fun fun! There's something to be said about the pleasure of reading these old, vintage mystery novels, with their often elaborately-plotted crimes and solutions that even if you tried, you couldn't guess. Especially in this one, where there are a number of suspects, plenty of clues, and an equal number of red herrings left for the reader to sift through. The Red Widow Murders also offers its readers a great backstory which in and of itself is a bit chilling.
Unlike some of his other works, The Red Widow Murders isn't weighted down by a lot of archaisms, and it moves at a very nice pace. The characters are well drawn, the atmosphere is perfect, the story is a good one, and the mystery will leave you hanging until the very end. This one I can definitely recommend, especially to fans of golden-age mystery novels and of John Dickson Carr in particular. It's not a cozy novel by any stretch, and modern readers of mystery may find it a bit slow considering the fast pace of novels nowadays. However, if you are a dyed-in-the-wool fan of vintage crime, like me, it really is worth every minute you put into it. show less
A man is killed inside a locked room and Sir Henry Merrivale has to figure out how. The room was not only locked but watched from the outside. Much grimmer than later books featuring Merrivale, which can be funny at times. This was actually a re-read and I still didn't get the killer correct even though I recognized one scene that pointed me to the murder. Enjoyable
Great opening -- Dr. Michael Tarliane (from Bowstring Murders)n is told to walk along a street in London --he is asked in to an "experiment" where men draw cards to decide which one will spend 2 hours in a room where several people have mysteriously died. The room is linked to a family inheritance from a man who married an heiress to the Sansom family, hereditary French executioners at the time of the French Revolution. The flashback account of that young man's experiences is very unpleasant. In the solution tgere are in effect 2 answers, one to how the earlier deaths happened, and the second trip how the recent one was done.
8496390039
"¿Cree usted que una habitación puede matar?". Esta pregunta, viniendo de sir George Anstruther, hombre consagrado a la ciencia y director del Museo Británico, le parece al doctor Tairlaie el preludio de un razonamiento filosófico. Pero luego, ya metido en la aventura, sabe de la existencia de un testamento que prohíbe abrir una estancia, cerrada desde la muerte de un antepasado, a riesgo de perder la herencia.
Nov 23, 2022Spanish
Serie Negra
Sep 11, 2024Spanish
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Author Information

228+ Works 18,933 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
- The Red Widow Murders
- Original title
- The Red Widow Murders
- Original publication date
- 1935
- People/Characters
- Sir Henry Merrivale; Dr. Michael Tairlaine; Lord Mantling; Humphrey Masters (Chief Inspector); Guy Brixham; Isabel Brixham (show all 21); Robert Carstairs; Martin Longueval Ravelle; Sir George Anstruther; Ralph Bender; Judith Brixham; Dr Eugene Arnold; Shorter; Dr. Pelham; Charles Brixham; Marie-Hortense Longueval; Marthe Dubut Sanson; Martin Longueval de Tours; Marie Brixham; Martin Longueval; Grandpa Mantling
- Important places
- Mantling House; London, England, UK
- First words
- When Dr. Michael Tairlaine boarded the bus that evening in March, it must be confessed that his somewhat elderly pulse was not so quiet as usual.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)'...Your move, H. M. Mine has passed.'
- Canonical DDC/MDS
- 823.912
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 282
- Popularity
- 113,743
- Reviews
- 6
- Rating
- (3.78)
- Languages
- 7 — English, Finnish, French, German, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 14
- ASINs
- 16





























































