Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Mad Hatter Mystery
The Mad Hatter Mystery | John Dickson Carr
4 posts | 3 read | 2 to read
At the hand of an outrageous prankster, top hats are going missing all over London, snatched from the heads of some of the city's most powerful people--but is the hat thief the same as the person responsible for stealing a lost story by Edgar Allan Poe, the manuscript of which has just disappeared from the collection of Sir William Bitton? Unlike the manuscript, the hats don't stay stolen for long, each one reappearing in unexpected and conspicuous places shortly after being taken: on the top of a Trafalgar Square statue, hanging from a Scotland Yard lamppost, and now, in the foggy depths of the Tower of London, on the head of a corpse with a crossbow bolt through the heart. Amateur detective and lexicographer Dr. Gideon Fell is on the case, and when the dead man is identified as the nephew of the collector, he discovers that the connections underlying the bizarre and puzzling crimes may be more intimate than initially expected.Reprinted for the first time in thirty years, the second novel in the Dr. Gideon Fell series, which need not be read in any order, finds the iconic character investigating one of the most extraordinary murders of his career. A baffling whodunnit with menace at every turn, The Mad Hatter Mystery proves that Carr is the "unexcelled master of creepy erudition, swift-moving excitement and suspense through atmosphere" (New York Times).
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
kristenm
The Mad Hatter Mystery | John Dickson Carr
post image
Pickpick

It took me a bit to get into this one but, once I did, I got caught up in its somewhat unique way of spooling out answers and (faulty) solutions. I also liked Dr. Fell, the “amateur” detective of the story. I kept picturing Sydney Greenstreet in the role!

blurb
kristenm
The Mad Hatter Mystery | John Dickson Carr
post image

True story: received a belated holiday present today (The Book of Forgotten Authors by Christopher Fowler) and, while peeking through the author/chapter list, realized that my current book is actually by one of them! (John Dickson Carr — thanks to Penzler American Mystery Classics for making him less forgotten!)

review
rabbitprincess
The Mad Hatter Mystery | John Dickson Carr
Pickpick

Death at the Tower of London in a mystery from the Golden Age of detective fiction is right up my alley. I enjoyed this a lot; sometimes impossible-crime novels annoy me, especially if the detective is smug about knowing the answer (although Holmes gets a free pass because reasons 🙃), but Dr Fell doesn't take himself seriously.

22 likes1 stack add
blurb
rabbitprincess
The Mad Hatter Mystery | John Dickson Carr
post image

The cover of the American Mystery Classics edition is scary AF 😰😱

BiblioLitten Frankenstein‘s monster meets P.G Wodehouse. 5y
33 likes1 stack add2 comments