The Mystery of The Fiery Eye

by Robert Arthur

The Three Investigators (7)

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Three junior detectives solve a mystery involving a collection of antique busts, a legacy, a strange letter, and a red ruby.

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10 reviews
The Fiery Eye, we learn early on in this Three Investigators romp, is a large flawless ruby that disappeared a half century ago from the temple in India where it was used to suss out evildoers (just go with it). Alfred Hitchcock (yes, that one) asks Jupiter, Pete, and Bob to take the case in aid of a young English boy, August August (but just call him Gus), whose dead uncle left him a letter that seems to indicate he had possession of the jewel and has bequeathed it to Gus. The letter is a riddle (but of course it is) so that the bad guys who are also in pursuit of the stone won't discover its hiding place before the boys do.

Hijinks ensue and involve a collection of old plaster busts of famous men that are acquired by Jupiter's show more junkyard-owning Uncle Titus, the boys' ingenious Ghost to Ghost Hookup system of obtaining information, and an actual girl! As Jupiter's Aunt Mathilda would say, "Mercy and goodness and sweetness and light!"

If you've read any of the other books in this series, you'll like this one. The biggest mystery solved for me was what happened to the Three Investigators' use of the gold-plated Rolls Royce, which they won 30 days' use of back in Book 1 (three years ago) and have been using ever since. The solution is only a temporary one, so I guess I'll have keep reading to see what comes next.
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Bought 17 Sep 2007 - charity shop

Another of the fab Alfred Hitchcock themed mystery stories, featuring Jupiter Jones and his two friends. I was feeling a bit cold-in-the-head-y yesterday and only had 7 novels in 27 TBRs, and they were all way down the pile, so I picked this out of the pony and French pile. Great fun, the story is well plotted and twisty enough, but not confusing. And you know they will save the day, but not HOW, right up to the last page!
The Three Investigators help a British boy find the inheritance willed to him by his great-uncle, an immense ruby of ancient lineage and seemingly cursed, the Fiery Eye. The will describes the Fiery Eye's hidden location in a word puzzle that they must decipher, and before some ruthless competition who are also on the ruby's trail. This story was unusual in that, for the first time, a girl their own age makes a brief appearance, with the promise of a future association -- and possibly a hint of romantic entanglement? -- with the Three Investigators. Also, Jupiter Jones is quite on his game in this book, thinking fast and inventively in unexpected situations with danger looming.
I read a lot of The Three Investigators books when I grew up, so re-read one for fun. Nostalgia, but quite OK story. The early books (by Robert Arthur) are the good ones.
read some of the series in my early teens (apparently including this one, though I do not remember doing so) and have come back to them as a lark due the reviews by The Invisible Event.

very readable and not as childish as might be first thought (though still childish)

Big Ship

10/11/2025
The Three Investigators must solve an old man's riddle to uncover a great fortune for their friend, Gus. But they're racing against a sinister bunch of treasure hunters who are also hot on the trail. Who will arrive first at the mysterious Fiery Eye?
A great, easy-to-read mystery.

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1970s
657 works; 23 members
Books We Loved As Children
603 works; 252 members

Author Information

Picture of author.
Author
96+ Works 10,218 Members

All Editions

Hitchcock, Alfred (Introduction)

Some Editions

Corner, Jackie (Designer)
Kane, Harry (Illustrator)
Pitkänen, Inkeri (Translator)

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Belongs to Publisher Series

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Mystery of The Fiery Eye
Original title
The Mystery of the Fiery Eye
Original publication date
1967
People/Characters
Jupiter Jones; Pete Crenshaw; Robert "Bob" Andrews
Important places
California, USA; USA
First words
It was a busy day at The Jones Salvage Yard.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)The minute I go inside the house, she's going to make me take a bath."
Original language
English

Classifications

Genre
Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
813.52Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991900-1945
LCC
PZ7 .A744 .ALanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

Statistics

Members
613
Popularity
47,508
Reviews
10
Rating
(3.76)
Languages
9 — Catalan, Danish, English, Finnish, German, Greek, Italian, Spanish, Swedish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
30
ASINs
14