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Showing posts with label Gaston Leroux. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gaston Leroux. Show all posts

a Case for the Misses Leavenworth

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detective novels, mysteries- I love them. I've read some or all of titles of Poe, Wilkie Collins , Arthur Conan Doyle Gaston Leroux and of course Agatha Christie & Dorothy Sayers.  To think I had until just this moment missed "the Mother of the Detective Story," Anna Katharine Green- pains me. I have remedied that and if you have had the same fate I suggest The Leavenworth Case.




It seems Anna Katharine introduced her ongoing series of  stories with Detective Ebenezer Gryce solving murders a full nine years be for Conan Doyle did his Sherlock novels.  Fortunately Detective Gryce has help from a gentleman-Raymond- who can traverse the intrigues of New York society where Gryce can not. Gouty Gryce is likeable, but Raymond is more intriguing and it is from his point of view the murder of a distinguished Mr. Leavenworth and the subsequent evidence that is piling up at the door of one of his two nieces. Both Mary & Eleanore are great beauties & the deeper Mr, Raymond delves into the crime the more he becomes emotionally entangled with both the women.



I can't fault  Green's style-a bit stilted- but some how suggestive of Edith Wharton, I was caught up in the plot rather quickly . Perhaps it is the era Green sets her Case in but I couldn't help think of Wharton & the heroines in her novels-trapped by society's dictates with little to recourse but a successful marriage. Green, a Brooklyn native and the daughter of a criminal attorney, published The Leavenworth Case in 1878.  Green married Charles Rohlfs,  an internationally known furniture designer in 1884.  She went on to publish mysteries with female sleuths-a  society spinster Amelia Butterworth, said to be the prototype for Miss Marple & Violet Strange, debutante leading a secret life as a sleuth.
I have to read these of course- I've got a case.




the romantic langour of Albert Joseph Moore's paintings seem to capture the mood of Mr. Raymond as he falls deeper and deeper under the spell of the two cousins.

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the mystery of the yellow room by gaston leroux

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if you like a mystery a must read is The Mystery of the Yellow Room by Gaston Leroux. Leroux wrote The Phantom of the Opera. the Yellow Room, originally published in French Le Mystère de la Chambre Jaune in the 1907 periodical L'illustration.






Detective Joseph Rouletabille makes his first appearance in the Yellow Room- and has an impossible crime to unravel. Leroux holds nothing back -reader is given each detail found by Rouletabille along with floor plans of the crime scene.

read it online here


stairs to the attic




the laboratory

Boldini




Glandier
Professor Stangerson's Chateau






the Park





Mlle Stangerson's Bedroom





Mlle Stangerson's Drawing Room






Great Hall of Glandier






Long Gallery of the Chateau






characters illustrated by Boldini


Joseph Rouletabille 
the young journalist and detective
 




 

Frederic Larsan – distinguished police detective



 


Sinclair-the narrator & friend to Rouletabille





Professor Stangerson 
the scientist, owner of "Chateau du Glandier"




Mathile Stangerson 
daughter of the famous scientist & his assistant 











M.Robert Darzac
- Mathile Stangerson's fiance




Jacques the caretaker



happier times
Mlle Stangerson & Darzac





Mlle Stangerson- the victim





the painful interrogation of Mlle Stangerson





the mysterious correspondence of Mlle


The novel finds its continuation in The Perfume of the Lady in Black where a number of the characters familiar from this story reappear.




all exterior and interior views from (here)


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