Written in 1905, this isn't an especially riveting tale, but carries the reader from point to point effectively, if slowly. The pacing is not the modern, action-packed ride that one typically associates with mysteries. True to its time period, there is much talking, much description, and lots of women crying or being angry. The reader travels with the detectives point by point, and this slows the narrative down; by the final few chapters, I was starting to wish we could just get ON with it already, instead of the constant back-and-forth between characters and places. As a mystery, it's so-so. As a picture of the times in which it was written, it was absorbing.