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review 2017-04-04 03:20
A Loving, Mocking Tribute to Nero Wolfe
Nearly Nero: The Adventures of Claudius Lyon, the Man Who Would Be Wolfe - Loren D Estleman

I've heard about the stories in this volume for years, but have never tracked one down before -- and then a whole collection of them show up on NetGalley! How could I not request it? I'm so glad this book exists so that those of us who don't get the magazines, etc. that publish short mystery fiction can have them (and even those who do have access to those magazines, etc. can have them in one handy volume).

 

Anyway, here's the setup: Claudius Lyon is a huge fan of Nero Wolfe -- he reads every one of the reports that Archie Goodwin's literary agent Rex Stout publishes. He's such a fan that he wants to be Wolfe (like the guys dressing up in Batsuits in The Dark Knight Rises) -- he's fat, fairly clever, and wealthy enough not to need to work and still indulge himself. He renovates his townhouse to include a greenhouse, an elevator, and a first floor floorplan that pretty much matches Wolfe's. He hires a private chef -- a kosher chef of dubious quality (not that Lyon needs to eat kosher, it's just what Gus can cook), changes his name to something that approximates his hero's and hires a "man of action," Arnie Woodbine. Arnie's an ex-con, small-time crook who doesn't mind (too much) putting up with his looney boss for a steady paycheck and meals.

 

The number of ways that Lyon isn't Wolfe is pretty large and I won't spoil your fun in discovering them. Now, Lyon's unlicensed as a PI, so he can't take on paying clients -- but he occasionally gets people who will take him up on his free services. He's decent at solving puzzles and low-priority mysteries (not that he doesn't find his way into something bigger on occasion). Once he gets a client (non-paying, Arnie'd have me stress), he goes through whatever steps he needs to figure it out (including his own version of Wolfe's lip movement and sending Arnie on fact-finding missions), and goes to some lengths to assemble some sort of audience for his reveal. I can't help smiling as I think about it, really.

 

The whole thing is a tongue-in-cheek tribute to the Nero Wolfe/Rex Stout -- recognizing the brilliance of the Stout's work (how can you not?), while poking fun at it. Lyon's really a goofy character and Woodbine is great at pointing that out -- while begrudgingly admitting that he gets things right every now and then. There's a lot of fun to be had in the story telling -- the mysteries aren't all that much to get excited about, it's in watching Lyon stumble through his cases that the entertainment is found. Well, that and Woodbine's commentary.

 

Not unlike many of the Wolfe stories (particularly the short stories).

I wouldn't recommend reading more than two of these stories in a sitting, I think they work best as solo shots. It's a difficult call, because I typically wanted to go on for one more. Also, I'm not sure how enjoyable these'd be for non-Wolfe readers -- but then again, I think a lot of the humor would hold up and it might entice a reader to learn more about Lyon's idol. And anything that gets people to read Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe novels is a good thing.

 

But for readers of Stout's Wolfe novels? This is a must read. He's not trying and failing to recapture Stout's magic (see Goldsborough post-The Bloodied Ivy), he's intentionally missing and yet somehow getting a little of it. I really enjoyed this book and can easily see me re-reading it a handful of times.


Disclaimer: I received this eARC from Adams Media via NetGalley in exchange for this post -- thanks to both for this.

 

Source: irresponsiblereader.com/2017/04/03/nearly-nero-by-loren-d-estleman
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text 2017-01-29 23:00
Week 4 of 2017
Fer-de-Lance - Rex Stout,Loren D. Estleman
Shouldn't You Be in School? - LemonySnicket
Paper Moon - Joe David Brown,Peter Bogdanovich
Calvin and Hobbes: There's Treasure Everywhere - Bill Watterson
The Indispensable Calvin and Hobbes - Bill Watterson

Books Read: 5

 

 

"Shouldn't You Be in School": This is the third book in the All the Wrong Questions series. 4 stars

 

Paper Moon: The back of the copy I have compares this with To Kill a Mockingbird, they're not in the same league at all. I found the characters extremely annoying and the book wondered all over until the last couple of chapters. The ending itself was unsatisfying and I really wouldn't recommend this. 2 1/2 stars

 

There's Treasure Everywhere and The Indispensable Calvin and Hobbes: I don't have much to say about these two, it's Calvin and Hobbes. 4 stars

 

Fer-De-Lance: Nero Wolfe ranks up there with Sherlock Holmes and Flavia for me. The books are dated and I found myself cringing at some of the comments made throughout, but I still love them. 4 stars.

 

Total Read for the Month: 12

 

I'm doing good so far this year and I'm on schedule, a little ahead in fact to complete 100 books this year.

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review 2016-02-07 00:00
Sherlock Holmes: The Complete Novels and Stories, Volume II
Sherlock Holmes: The Complete Novels and Stories, Volume II - Loren D. Estleman, Arthur Conan Doyle

Almost three years ago exactly I set out to read every Sherlock Holmes story and novel, considering the length of the average story and the briefness of the novels I should have finished this long since, but, as my reviews attest, at times I could barely stand the bastard.

Despite starting strong with 'The Hound', Doyle's follow up novel. and the majority of the stories published after Holmes' return from the grave. fail to live up to expectations. There's a lot of merit of course, and if I had outright hated the things I never would have finished, but urgh. Whine and moan. The last collections of stories found Doyle on good terms with his creation, or had figured out what his audience wanted. Good reading, but I'd advise spacing it out as much as possible.

10/8/14 - 'The Hound of the Baskervilles': Five Stars

Elegant and suspenseful, I doubt Doyle ever surpassed this - I hope to be proven wrong in time.

12/4/14 - 'The Return of Sherlock Holmes': Two Stars

Back to the grindstone Doyle? There are enough stories of merit to make this collection readable, but artistically a disappointment.

1/6/15 - 'The Valley of Fear': Two Stars

The reader can't help but be drawn into the narrative about a corrupt Masonic Lodge in American coal country, but this mystery - a lengthy explanation for Holmes' benefit - has little to offer.

2/17/16 - 'His Last Bow & The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes': Four Stars

The strongest collection of stories since 'Memoirs', the last two Holmes books make up for the lack of pace with twenty-one stories that mostly deliver everything a reader could want from a Victorian mystery.

See also: 'Complete Novels and Short Stories, Vol I'

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review 2015-06-21 10:24
Sons of Moriaty Review
Sons of Moriarty and More Stories of Sherlock Holmes - Loren D. Estleman

Like with most short story collections, there were some that I enjoyed much more than others.  As I whole though I did enjoy the entire book.  Loren D. Estlemen seems to put together a very well rounded collection of Sherlock stories every single time, and his  story always seems to be my favorite of them all.  However, compared to the first collection of Sherlockian stories I read from Mr. Estlemen, this one wasn't quite as I good.  I didn't quite like quite as many stories from this collection, and I think that was why it took me so long to get through it despite it being only a little over two hundred pages.  I had to convince myself to get through one story to make it to the next, but I am looking forward to reading the third collection in the same Sherlock genre that just recently came out from Mr. Estlemen.  

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text 2014-09-17 19:30
September Book a Day #17: Favorite Literary Detective
The Eyre Affair - Jasper Fforde
Dark Fire - C.J. Sansom
A Great Deliverance - Elizabeth George
The Beekeeper's Apprentice (Mary Russell, #1) - Laurie R. King
Fer-de-Lance - Rex Stout,Loren D. Estleman
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes - Arthur Conan Doyle
The Pericles Commission - Gary Corby
Whose Body? - Dorothy L. Sayers

If we're talking a literal "literary detective," it must be Thursday Next!

 

If we're talking favorite detective in literature, I find it hard to pick just one.  I love Matthew Shardlake (a Tudor lawyer, working first for Cromwell, and then for Cranmer and Queen Catherine Parr - his cases sometimes involve murder investigations), Barbara Havers (I don't love Lyndley as much as Elizabeth George does; but no book of hers can have too much Havers), Mary Russell Holmes, Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin (confound it!), Nicomides and Diotima (who work for Pericles), Sherlock Holmes, and, of course, the magnificent Lord Peter Wimsey.

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