Reading the Detectives discussion

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The Three Taps
Group Challenges
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March 22: The Three Taps: A Detective Story Without a Moral - Ronald Knox (1927)
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Just opening up this thread - March is here and we are already on to the third book in our challenge! Many thanks to Susan for the introduction.
A link to the spoiler thread is below:
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
A link to the spoiler thread is below:
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
I enjoyed reading about the Knox brothers in Penelope Fitzgerald's biography The Knox Brothers
and had meant to read something by Ronald Knox for some time. Who else is reading this one?

Who is reading this one? I finished it recently and quite enjoyed it although I found the plot and characters a bit hard to keep track of at times.

Pamela wrote: "I’m about half way through and am really enjoying it. I’ll say more in the spoiler thread when I finish, but I think Angela’s presence is important in lightening the tone, she’s great."
Good to hear, Pamela. I found Angela quite witty but thought at times the long conversations bogged the story down a bit - also I wasn't quite sure at the number of jokes she and Miles make about the topic of death, although I suppose it is to help lighten the tone, as you say.
I found it interesting that Miles is so obsessed with playing patience with cards and lays out several decks to play simultaneously - my husband is similarly obsessed with patience on his tablet, but at least I don't trip over piles of cards!
Good to hear, Pamela. I found Angela quite witty but thought at times the long conversations bogged the story down a bit - also I wasn't quite sure at the number of jokes she and Miles make about the topic of death, although I suppose it is to help lighten the tone, as you say.
I found it interesting that Miles is so obsessed with playing patience with cards and lays out several decks to play simultaneously - my husband is similarly obsessed with patience on his tablet, but at least I don't trip over piles of cards!

Same here, glad it wasn’t just me! I did appreciate the humor, though, and the investigator’s wife, and how she worked right along with him.

Angela, thank you - I almost typed Emily in my comment , duh! She was a hightlight for me, as well.

Or have to be careful opening doors, so the cards don’t blow about in a draft!
Yes, I wasn’t sure about all the death jokes either - gallows humor, I guess, but (view spoiler)
I'm not too far in and loving it: the interplay between Bredon and his wife, as well as between Bredon and his friend from the Yard, is a treat. And I like Knox's humor.
Susan in NC, very true re the cards blowing about in a draught! I'll comment on your other point over in the spoiler thread.
That's fine - I didn't think it was really a spoiler anyway but have replied in the other thread :)

Thanks!

If anyone wants to know more about the "Rules" of detective fiction, as formulated by Ronald Knox and others, the podcast Shedunnit has done an episode about this - a fun listen.
https://shedunnitshow.com/therulesrem...
https://shedunnitshow.com/therulesrem...

Tracey wrote: "Just starting. Had too many library books that I'd ordered appear at the one time! I've read The Footsteps at the Lock by this author and really enjoyed that, so high hopes for this one."
It is annoying when all your requests show up at once. I immediately got Footsteps from the library after reading Taps so will be reading it soon.
It is annoying when all your requests show up at once. I immediately got Footsteps from the library after reading Taps so will be reading it soon.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Footsteps at the Lock (other topics)The Footsteps at the Lock (other topics)
The Knox Brothers (other topics)
The Three Taps (other topics)
The insurance firm investigator, Miles Bredon, must determine whether suicide or murder is the cause of the gas poisoning death in an inn of a man who has recently concluded a complex insurance policy and changed his will.
In a gas-lit inn in the countryside a man lies dead. The police, of course, investigate - and so do Miles Bredon and his wife, in the interests of the Indescribable Insurance Company, with which the deceased man, Mr Mottram, had been heavily insured.
The culprit is the three gas taps in Mr Mottram's room, and Miles hopes to prove that his death is suicide. Miles' old wartime colleague, Police Inspector Leyland, is convinced it's murder. And the conclusion is as ingenious as it is surprising.
Please do not post spoilers in this thread. Thank you.