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Last Laugh, Mr. Moto

by John P. Marquand

Other authors: See the other authors section.

Series: Mr. Moto (5)

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705378,673 (3.42)None
Japanese spymaster Mr. Moto travels to the Caribbean in search of a weapon with the power to determine the course of World War II November 1940: In Kingston Harbor, ex-navy pilot Bob Bolles lounges aboard his cutter. After months spent drifting from port to port, his only ironclad rule is no alcohol before noon. But when an American businessman named Malcolm Kingman, his gorgeous socialite wife, and their Swedish butler charter the Thistlewood for a trip to the remote Mercator Island, Bob's carefree life takes a dangerous and dramatic turn.   By the time he places the Kingmans' strange accents and realizes what they hope to recover from the deserted island, it's too late. He is caught in the middle of an international espionage plot with grave implications for the wars raging across Europe and Asia. To keep a powerful military secret from falling into the wrong hands, Bob must dig deep within himself to locate hidden reserves of courage. Easier said than done, as is outwitting Mr. Moto, a top secret agent of Imperial Japan who has been tracking the Thistlewood across the Caribbean Sea.   First serialized in the Saturday Evening Post, John P. Marquand's popular and acclaimed Mr. Moto Novels were the inspiration for 8 films starring Peter Lorre.… (more)
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Showing 5 of 5
“What is so rare as a day in June? Then if ever come perfect days.”

Fun that this quote is in here, as I am reading this in said month!

It’s my first Mr. Moto book and if his name hadn’t been in the title, I wouldn’t have even noticed his few brief appearances early in the story!

From his reappearance to finding the plane the story bogs down. Way down. Lots and lots of talking. Pretty much from the point that everyone reaches the island, the story just falls flat. I'm not sure if I'll try another book in this series. ( )
  Stahl-Ricco | Jun 28, 2023 |
Written right before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Last Laugh, Mr. Moto demonstrated the author's changing attitude towards the Japanese agent, Mr. Moto. In this book, Moto is almost an afterthought. In fact, but to supply a slight twist at the ending, the story might well have proceeded without him. As is, Moto, only comes on scene in detail over half way through the book. This is in strong contrast to the way Moto had been developing in the previous three books, where he was becoming more and more central to the plot. Too, Moto is no longer the far reaching thinker who outsmarts everyone. The last laugh in Last Laugh, Mr. Moto is on Mr. Moto, who is thoroughly deceived by the once drunken American sailor and French Vichy agent. But that should not be a surprise, because Moto is being outwitted at almost every turn of the book. This is no longer the mastermind of espionage we were used to earlier in the series.

This fifth Mr. Moto book was the last before the United States entered World War II--although it was not published until after the attack on Pearl Harbor. And it effectively closed down the entire series. Mr. Moto was never to be seen again during World War II or immediately thereafter. Marquand did allow him to be resurrected briefly in 1956/1957. But only in a Cold War context.

Thus ended the real career of Moto. And it didn't take place in the Far East but on an all but deserted Caribbean island. Marquand did manage to retain the feel of an exotic landscape in this story, but the overall energy is missing. The story itself lags, teeters, and collapses at the end. Not a fitting finale (if you discount the sole Mr. Moto novel written in the mid 1950s as the finale) for the Mr. Moto we came to know in the four previous books. ( )
  PaulCornelius | Apr 12, 2020 |
This is the 5th book in the Mr. Moto series, and the one I have liked the least so far (one to go). It's not a bad story and moves along pretty well and keeps one's interest. But, something just feels "off". I'm not sure how else to say it. It seemed a bit stiff and awkward. In part, some of the characterizations are meant to be awkward, but the intended awkwardness doesn't ring true, so to speak.

The story takes place around 1940. Before the bombing of Pearl Harbor for sure. Bob Bolle, quit the Navy because he was passed over for promotion, in part because he had a bit of a difficult personality from the perspective of some folks. He buys a schooner, modifies it so it can be sailed by only two people—he and his "boy", Tom—and has pretty much turned into a drunken bum cruising the Caribbean. He is about to be tossed out of Kingston, Jamaica, when a bartender gets the idea of hooking him up with a "couple" who just want to sail around to lonely places, Mr. and Mrs Kingman. So he agrees to go off with them, along with Tom, and the Kingman's "Swedish vallet", Oscar. Before he goes off, he runs into Mr. Moto, who is pretending to be the proprietor of a clothing store. Then, while shopping for travel clothes, Mrs. Kingman has a run-in with some "boys" in the store and Mr. Moto appears to calm things down. Then, it's off to sea in Bolle's schooner.

The Kingman's are an odd couple. They claim to be from New York. At times Mrs. K. appears to be afraid of Mr. K. At times Mrs. K. comes on to Bolle. Mr. K. tries mightily to speak with idiomatic American expressions, but there is always a hesitancy in his speech, and an occasional slip. Well, anyway, the Kingman's induce Bob Bolle to sail to an abandoned island, Mercator Island, where they think a French plane has been secreted, a plane with some magical new invention that might change the course of the war. Needless to say, Mr. Moto shows up on the island, Bob is in danger for his life, Mrs. K. continues to hit on him occasionally and so forth.

As I said, it's decent enough escapist literature, but feels slightly artificial. I'll be interested to see if the 6th Mr. Moto book returns to the quality of the first four, or if Marquand had shot his wad, so to speak, after finishing the 4th in the series. ( )
  lgpiper | Jun 21, 2019 |
I picked this up expecting a well-written mystery story. Rather than a straight mystery though, it's a riveting espionage thriller. This one is recommended. ( )
  Leischen | Jun 14, 2016 |
The next to last Moto story, set improbably in the Caribbean during World War II. Bob Bolles, beach bum ex-US Navy Man is hired(along with his black crewman Tom) to take a party in his small yacht to isolated Mercator Island, where they hope to find a French plane with an important new technical breakthrough. The party was initially sent by Vichy France though posing as wealthy New Yorkers, and includes Mr. Kingman, actually an Austrian-English freelance agent, hired by Vichy but operating in his own interests, probably for the Nazis, Helen (posing as Mrs. Kingman) who is a genuine Vichy agent, and Oscar, posing as their Swedish servant, but actually German. On the island, they are joined by a British policeman from Jamaica (who is promptly captured and plays very little part in the story) and Mr. Moto, who wants the plane for Japan. Helen and Bob have a romantic attraction, more limited than in most of the Moto stories since she remains dedicated to Vichy and tries to use it to manipulate him. Spoiler: Ultimately, there is the usual brief violent showdown, Bob kills Oscar (who is trying to strangle him) and Mr. Moto kills Kingman (who is trying to shoot him). Nobody gets the plane's secret, because Bob wrecks it (since the plane was built in the US, presumably, he as an American saw no need to preserve this example. He and Helen agree to try to meet after the war.This is the one Moto book in which Mr. Moto does not end up getting what he wants, perhaps because it is the only one in which Japan and the US are actually enemies (or on the verge of being enemies). This may also be why this is the one Moto book which is not included in either of the Moto book collections, so I had to buy it separately. ( )
  antiquary | Aug 28, 2013 |
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» Add other authors (2 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
John P. Marquandprimary authorall editionscalculated
Lenclud, JacquelineTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Japanese spymaster Mr. Moto travels to the Caribbean in search of a weapon with the power to determine the course of World War II November 1940: In Kingston Harbor, ex-navy pilot Bob Bolles lounges aboard his cutter. After months spent drifting from port to port, his only ironclad rule is no alcohol before noon. But when an American businessman named Malcolm Kingman, his gorgeous socialite wife, and their Swedish butler charter the Thistlewood for a trip to the remote Mercator Island, Bob's carefree life takes a dangerous and dramatic turn.   By the time he places the Kingmans' strange accents and realizes what they hope to recover from the deserted island, it's too late. He is caught in the middle of an international espionage plot with grave implications for the wars raging across Europe and Asia. To keep a powerful military secret from falling into the wrong hands, Bob must dig deep within himself to locate hidden reserves of courage. Easier said than done, as is outwitting Mr. Moto, a top secret agent of Imperial Japan who has been tracking the Thistlewood across the Caribbean Sea.   First serialized in the Saturday Evening Post, John P. Marquand's popular and acclaimed Mr. Moto Novels were the inspiration for 8 films starring Peter Lorre.

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