Friday, July 08, 2016

Friday's Forgotten Books: Rex Stout Day

From the Wolfe Pack, the Rex Stout Society.

About Rex Stout
Author, Business Man, Sailor, Activist, Family Man, & a person with many interests

Rex Todhunter Stout was born in Noblesville, Indiana, December 1, 1886. After a brief time on campus at the University of Kansas, Stout quit school to enlist in the Navy where he spent two years as warrant officer on board President Theodore Roosevelt's yacht.

After the Navy, he began to write for pulp fiction magazines and also tried his hand at a variety of jobs.

He published three novels before he turned to the mystery genre. The books received favorable reviews but were not best sellers. Following the 1929 stock market crash he lost a great deal of the money he had saved. He returned to the United States and continued to write serious novels for a few more years. In 1932 he moved from New York City to High Meadow, the house he built on the Connecticut-New York state line. In 1934 Rex Stout published his first Nero Wolfe novel, Fer-de-Lance.

More than seventy other Nero Wolfe books and stories followed. During World War II, Rex Stout waged a personal campaign against Nazism serving as chairman of the War Writers Board, wrote and broadcast the CBS radio program "Our Secret Weapon," and was a member of several national committees. After the war, he resumed writing Nero Wolfe novels. In 1959 he won the Mystery Writers of America's Grand Master Award. Rex Stout died October 27, 1975 at the age of 88. A month before his death, he published his final Nero Wolfe book, A Family Affair.

For you edification:
Forty Years with Nero Wolfe, Terry Teachout
An Addictive Author, Laurence DiMaria


THE BLACK MOUNTAIN, Rex Stout

Although I was warned that this was an atypical Rex Stout novel, I had read enough of his books 25 years ago to be in the mood to read something different. And in many ways, it was a good choice. Wolfe steps out of his brownstone, out of his country, and out of his typical "you do the footwork, Archie and I'll do the brain work." setup
But in other ways,  since it had been so long, I wanted that familiar setup. I am not even sure a man of Wolfe's girth and sloth could undertake this trip. But let's say he can.
But getting to the story...
When Nero Wolfe's close friend, a restaurateur is killed, followed by Wolfe's adopted daughter, the reason clearly lies in Montenegro (where both were involved in a protest movement), so much to all of our surprise, Nero abandons his usual methods of solving crimes and goes there, undertaking a difficult passage through the mountains. This is in 1954 and the geopolitics is difficult with Tito in power.
It was hard to know who your enemies were and indeed, Wolfe does not. This is not a whodunnit as much as it is how will Wolfe trip him up. And the real genius in it is that Stout gets to prove he could have written spy novels with as much grace as his mysteries. I enjoyed it but it was not as good as Fer De Lance, The League of Frightened Men or Too Many Cooks for me.
One review suggested that this was a way for Stout to clear out two characters that had been hanging around too long. I wonder.



Sergio Angelini, PRISONER'S BASE
Yvette Banek, MIGHT AS WELL BE DEAD and CHAMPAGNE FOR ONE
Bitter Tea and Mystery, BLACK ORCHIDS
Cinch Review, TOO MANY COOKS 
Bill Crider, TARGET PRACTICE, Rex Stout
Rich Horton, CURTAINS FOR THREE 
Jerry House, THE GREAT LEGEND 
George Kelley, THE GOLDEN SPIDER
Steve Lewis, THE LEAGUE OF FRIGHTENED MEN
J.F. Norris,THREE MEN OUTALPHABET HICKS 
Matt Paust, THE DOORBELL RANG 
Richard Robinson, CURTAINS FOR THREE
TracyK. SOME BURIED CAESAR

Brian Busby, THE QUEBEC PLOT, Leo  Heaps
Scott Cupp, JACK OF EAGLES, James Blish
Martin Edwards, THE NECESSARY CORPSE, R. C. Woodthorpe
Curt Evans, R in the Month, Nancy Spain
Margot Kinberg, THE CONSTABLE'S TALE, Donald Smith
Rob Kitchin, DARKSIDE, Belinda Bauer
B.V. Lawson, I'LL SING YOU TWO-O 
Todd Mason, ISAAC ASIMOV PRESENTS THE GREAT SF STORIES 18 (1956) edited by Isaac Asimov and Martin H. Greenberg ; SPEAKING OF HORROR: INTERVIEWS WITH WRITERS OF THE SUPERNATURAL by Darrell Schweitzer et al.

Terrence P. McCauley, THE HUNTER, Richard Stark
J. Kingston Pierce, ANYTHING BUT SAINTLY, Richard Deming 
Gerard Saylor, DOUBLE BACK, Libby Fisher Hellman
Kevin Tipple, JOYLAND, Stephen King
TomCat, BONY AND THE MOUSE, Arthur Upfield
A.J,. Wright, William Bradford Huie
Zybahn, THEY SHOOT HORSES, DON'T THEY, Horace McCoy

17 comments:

Todd Mason said...

Damned if I didn't forget Stout day...argh. And I was thinking about one of the ELLERY QUEEN'S ANTHOLOGY issues with a Wolfe novella just the other day, but everything, as usual, got in the way of reading it.

So, instead, here's a duo with the kind of long, unwieldy title you love, Patti...I don't choose 'em for them, honest.

ISAAC ASIMOV PRESENTS THE GREAT SF STORIES 18 (1956) edited by Isaac Asimov and Martin H. Greenberg; SPEAKING OF HORROR: INTERVIEWS WITH WRITERS OF THE SUPERNATURAL by Darrell Schweitzer et al.

Todd Mason said...

Though I continue to recommend this memoir, by Martha Foley, a great friend and writing colleague of Stout's, as informative about the early development of Wolfe and co.:

THE STORY OF STORY MAGAZINE by Martha Foley (assembled and notes added in part by Jay Neugeboren), W.W. Norton 1980

BVLawson said...

Somehow I missed Stout day, too, Patti - which is a shame, because I devoured his books when I was growing up. Nice choice for a theme, though!

pattinase (abbott) said...

I should have announced it again. I will announce them more often from now on.

Casual Debris said...

Hi Patti, There appears to be an error in the link to Todd's article.
Frank

pattinase (abbott) said...

Thanks, Frank!

Al Tucher said...

A little tidbit: Archie sometimes on Wolfe's girth by pointing out that he weighs one seventh of a ton. That sounds impressive, but do the arithmetic. It's about 285 pounds. Apparently the obesity epidemic in 21st century America is real, because that's pretty routine now.

pattinase (abbott) said...

Unless he's 5'2,

Charles Gramlich said...

Was just talking with a couple of huge Rex Stout fans.

Brian Busby said...

Greetings Patti,

Here's my FFB for this week. Not Rex Stout, rather a thriller by a man who led a rather extraordinairy life. The author's debut, it's a pretty decent summer read:

The Quebec Plot by Leo Heaps

pattinase (abbott) said...

Sorry for missing it.

J F Norris said...

Patti, thanks for including a past essay of mine for this week. However, I read one Stout book especially for today. I just finished adding all the illustrations to the post and it's up now.

Three Men Out

Yvette said...

I love Nero Wolfe and Archie - a great theme, Patti. I've read all the books and yet I keep going back and rereading and rereading. Far as I'm concerned, Rex Stout was a genius at what he did. (I believe he was also a mathematics brain ala Professor Moriarity. Ha!)

pattinase (abbott) said...

I would rate him in my top ten. Beautiful writing in that Black Mountain. I just wanted the old hi-jinx

TracyK said...

Thanks for including two of my posts (Black Orchids and Some Buried Caesar) and thanks for doing a special FFB post for Rex Stout.

Sergio (Tipping My Fedora) said...

Thanks for including my older entry in this, very kind I do love Stout and the Wolfe books!

Barrie said...

I'm a huge Nero Wolfe fan! I didn't realize it was Rex Stout Day...I guess I celebrated at the beach. :)