This was a donation to my Little Free Library Shed that I forgot to include on my currently reading shelf. This paperback book was originally published in 2005, (translated by Sonia Soto) but still feels refreshing to read 20 years later. Interestingly enough, this book, was also made into a movie in 2007, starring, Elijah Wood and John Hurt.
It is about an Argentine man who shares his story of when he was a 22-year-old university student at Oxford in 1994. Of, how he was renting the basement of a brownstone owned by a Mrs. Eagleton who currently lived with her granddaughter Beth, and, once served on the Enigma Code project in WWII.
One day, when coming home from school with his second month’s rent, the student bumps into well-renowned Oxford logician, professor of logic, Arthur Seldom who is also lingering outside the door of his landlady. When no one answers, they decide to open the unlocked door and enter, and immediately find Mrs. Eagleton dead.
Who could have killed her and why?
With careful observation of the setting, questions ensue making readers wonder if someone could be following along with Seldom’s mathematical book’s clues and symbols about serial killers? Or could her death have something to do with Mrs. Eagleton’s past work on the Enigma Code? Who is leaving the cryptic clues and why?
The mix of mathematics and murder makes for an interesting premise, especially when the author holds a PhD in mathematics. As readers follow along, the solution may be unexpected, yet logical and surprising at the same time. (No spoilers from me.)
This is an easy-to-read, page-turning, thoughtful, cozy that should be pleasing to those who enjoy puzzle type mysteries.