TROUBLE IN THE BROWNSTONE
A Nero Wolfe Mystery
By Robert Goldsborough
Mysterious Press
246 pgs.
Every now and then we readers discover fictional characters
and become totally enamored with them. Enough so that when their creators pass
on, we hope other writers will take on those heroes and continue their
adventures; most of which we refer to as pastiches. (Note – a term we totally
dislike.) Now, regardless of your attitude towards continuations, it is all too
clear some of these characters have come to belong to the world at large. When
thinking of such, Sherlock Holmes immediately takes the number one spot. Since
his creator’s passing, hundreds, perhaps thousands, of his new adventures have
been written. Why? Simple, because his world wide fans demanded more.
Thus is the case with Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin, the
irascible characters created by the late Red Stout as his take on the
Holmes/Watson duo. It was no surprise that they quickly became the darlings of
mystery fans everywhere and when Stout passed away in 1975 it seemed the end
for this delightful pair. Happily such was not the case when journalist/author
Robert Goldsborough arrived to reopen the door to the famous Brownstone on West 35th St. and
began writing new Nero Wolfe mysteries. In the past fifteen such, he’s related
the first ever meeting between Wolfe and Archie, taking us on a visit to Archie’s
hometown and even had Wolfe come to Inspector Cramer’s rescue on a tricky case.
It is these forays into the established character’s background that have made
all of Goldsborough’s books a pure delight. Book # 16, “Trouble in the
Brownstone” is no exception.
It begins with Wolfe’s orchid expert Theodore Horstmann
being savagely beaten weeks after having left his rooftop apartment for new
digs. Left in a coma from which he may never recover, Wolfe and Archie devote
themselves to finding the perpetrators and bringing them to justice. This leads
to McCready’s an Irish bar near the docks of the Hudson
River. Archie soon learns the bar is frequented by foreign seamen
most of whom reside at a five story hotel across the street from the pub. Set
in the months after the end of World War Two, Goldsborough’s plot centers
around the plight of thousands of Displaced Refugees desperately hoping to
immigrate to America.
Thus the opportunity arose for unscrupulous opportunists in providing smuggling
avenues for those people with the money to pay. How this connects with Horstmann’s
fate is part of the complicated knot the rotund sleuth must unravel if the
villains are to be exposed.
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