A trio of mystery cases not to be missed by Nero Wolfe fans. In the first, questions about a poisoning come to an abrupt end--with a blunt instrument. Then Wolfe must decode the name of a killer in a message penciled by the victim. Finally, making an uncharacteristic foray to a World Series game, Wo
Three Men Out
โ Scribed by Stout, Rex
- Book ID
- 108648161
- Publisher
- Crimeline
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 96 KB
- Series
- Nero Wolfe 23
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
A trio of mystery cases not to be missed by Nero Wolfe fans. In the first, questions about a poisoning come to an abrupt end--with a blunt instrument. Then Wolfe must decode the name of a killer in a message penciled by the victim. Finally, making an uncharacteristic foray to a World Series game, Wolfe meets murder again, when a rookie's struck out before he even gets to bat.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The legendary Nero Wolfe finds himself deep in foul territory in these three baffling cases of murder and mayhem. In the first, some sharp questions about a poisoning come to an abrupt end -- as in death by a blunt instrument. Then Wolfe must decode the last message of a competitor who pencils in th
Three Men Out is a collection of Nero Wolfe mystery novellas by Rex Stout, published by the Viking Press in 1954. The book comprises three stories that first appeared in The American Magazine: โข Invitation to Murder (August 1953, as "Will to Murder") โข The Zero Clue (December 1953, as "Scared to Dea
The legendary Nero Wolfe finds himself deep in foul territory in these three baffling cases of murder and mayhem. In the first, some sharp questions about a poisoning come to an abrupt end -- as in death by a blunt instrument. Then Wolfe must decode the last message of a competitor who pencils in th
The legendary Nero Wolfe finds himself deep in foul territory in these three baffling cases of murder and mayhem. In the first, some sharp questions about a poisoning come to an abrupt end -- as in death by a blunt instrument. Then Wolfe must decode the last message of a competitor who pencils in th