Over My Dead Body
"Over My Dead Body" is the seventh Nero Wolfe detective novel. The story first appeared in abridged form in "The American Magazine". By the time it was published, the Wolfe/Goodwin books had become an established series but Wolfe's background had never been explored. Here Stout starts to do clarify Wolfe's youth by bringing in in a number of characters, including some from Montenegro.

Carla Lovchen and Neya Tormic, two young women from Montenegro, come to Wolfe's office asking for help. Miss Tormic has been accused of a theft of diamonds from the locker room where she works. She claims the accusation to be false and cannot afford to pay Wolfe's fee, but she has a document that shows Wolfe adopted her when she was an infant. Although he has never seen her since, Wolfe agrees to undertake the investigation. As Archie is dispatched to investigate, murder is discovered. In the end Wolfe gets the main characters together in his office and, in the manner typical of the series, he will expose the murderer and the motive.
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Over My Dead Body
"Over My Dead Body" is the seventh Nero Wolfe detective novel. The story first appeared in abridged form in "The American Magazine". By the time it was published, the Wolfe/Goodwin books had become an established series but Wolfe's background had never been explored. Here Stout starts to do clarify Wolfe's youth by bringing in in a number of characters, including some from Montenegro.

Carla Lovchen and Neya Tormic, two young women from Montenegro, come to Wolfe's office asking for help. Miss Tormic has been accused of a theft of diamonds from the locker room where she works. She claims the accusation to be false and cannot afford to pay Wolfe's fee, but she has a document that shows Wolfe adopted her when she was an infant. Although he has never seen her since, Wolfe agrees to undertake the investigation. As Archie is dispatched to investigate, murder is discovered. In the end Wolfe gets the main characters together in his office and, in the manner typical of the series, he will expose the murderer and the motive.
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Over My Dead Body

Over My Dead Body

by Rex Stout
Over My Dead Body

Over My Dead Body

by Rex Stout

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Overview

"Over My Dead Body" is the seventh Nero Wolfe detective novel. The story first appeared in abridged form in "The American Magazine". By the time it was published, the Wolfe/Goodwin books had become an established series but Wolfe's background had never been explored. Here Stout starts to do clarify Wolfe's youth by bringing in in a number of characters, including some from Montenegro.

Carla Lovchen and Neya Tormic, two young women from Montenegro, come to Wolfe's office asking for help. Miss Tormic has been accused of a theft of diamonds from the locker room where she works. She claims the accusation to be false and cannot afford to pay Wolfe's fee, but she has a document that shows Wolfe adopted her when she was an infant. Although he has never seen her since, Wolfe agrees to undertake the investigation. As Archie is dispatched to investigate, murder is discovered. In the end Wolfe gets the main characters together in his office and, in the manner typical of the series, he will expose the murderer and the motive.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940151028066
Publisher: Book Revivals Press
Publication date: 07/27/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Sales rank: 192,661
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

About The Author
Rex Stout (1886-1975) was the sixth of nine children born of Quaker parents. He was educated in a country school and, later, briefly attended the University of Kansas before enlisting in the Navy where he served for two years. After he left the Navy in 1908, Rex Stout began writing freelance articles, but made his fortune devising and implementing a school banking system that was adopted in four hundred cities and towns throughout the country. In 1927 he retired from the world of finance and, with the proceeds, left for Paris to write serious fiction. Before turning to detective fiction, he wrote three novels that received favorable reviews, but it was writing detective fiction, and as creator of the Nero Wolfe character, that he become famous as a writer. The first Nero Wolfe novel, "Fer-de-Lance", appeared In 1934. It was followed by many others, which established Nero Wolfe on a par with Erle Stanley Gardners famous Perry Mason.
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