The French Powder Mystery Audiobook By Ellery Queen cover art

The French Powder Mystery

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The French Powder Mystery

By: Ellery Queen
Narrated by: Robert Fass
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About this listen

French's department store was famous for the rare merchandise it offered its elite clientele. But no one there could be proud of its latest exclusive window display: the bloodstained corpse of the owner's wife. Ellery Queen and his father, Inspector Richard Queen, soon discover that this palace of commerce is a viper's nest of fear, jealousy, suspicion, and hatred, where love is cheap and the price of honor marked down. But worst of all is the mysterious mocking mastermind who is out to turn the glittering store into a bargain basement of murder.

©2013 Ellery Queen (P)2013 AudioGO
Detective Fiction Mystery
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What listeners say about The French Powder Mystery

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SOOOPER SLOOOTHS 👍👀👌

Just wonderfully entertaining listening. Written nearly a century ago and I listened virtually Non-stop. The highbrow
Victorian language is expertly narrated with distinctive character accents creating a 3D movie like experience. the plot twists and narrative had me riveted to the action. if you like mystery novels this one will not let you down highly highly recommended . five stars for sure🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Whodunit fun

I enjoy these classic whodunits as much for the glimpses into old New York as for the mystery itself.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Murder in the Department Store

This is my favorite EQ story.
The wife of a NY department store owner is found murdered with her body tucked away in a display window!
Husband, x-husband, children, step-children, smugglers, store employees, truck drivers and a French designer any of whom could have done the deed, but who did? You might figure out who did it, but it will probably take Ellery to tell you why.

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  • Overall
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Love it!

These mysteries are wonderfully woven and include a wonderful use of language and dry humor. I'm hooked! Also, the narrator is a natural in using different tones/accents for each character.

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5 people found this helpful

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Very entertaining

It's set in 1921 and is interesting to see how police procedures have changed in 100 years.
In the last chapter Ellery Queen addresses the listener and says that we have all the information that he has and we should be able to solve the crime. He's right but I couldn't figure it out - I didn't pay attention to obvious details.
A tip: don't try to figure out motive, rather how the murder was commited, such as access, means and opportunity.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Mystery from the era of the classics

Although Richard Queen is actually the police inspector, it is his erudite, book-loving son Ellery who is the real sleuth in these stories. They are almost a century old, but have not lost any of the punch they must have had back in the 1920's.

In this book, a woman is murdered and discovered in a shocking place. Her husband is in his office having a business meeting at the time of the discovery--and immediately the detection begins. Everyone in the business faction, as well as family, become suspects (sooner or later).

The hallmark feature of the Ellery Queen works is that they are like cerebral murder puzzles. Ellery Queen professes to be interested in "ivory tower" kinds of ideas, peppers his conversation with latin and french comments, and would appear to be the least likely person to take an interest in something as far removed from that mindset as a police investigation. But since his father is working on solving cases, he brings his powers of deduction to the scene and proceeds to unravel what took place.

The beauty of this series is that the clues are always there for the alert reader to put together, just as EQ does. The difficulty with (at least this particular book) was (to me) that it dragged on a bit unnecessarily long. I was growing a bit weary of it by the end. However, I was not able (despite all the clues being right there) to figure out the murderer, almost until this person was revealed by Ellery, in an Agatha Christie style ending where everybody is brought together and the murderer revealed.

It is a fun read--with only the caveat that it seemed a bit excessively long. Recommend--great fun if you like the early mysteries from that era. Ellery Queen is like the American version of Dorothy Sayers' Lord Peter Wimsey.

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18 people found this helpful

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Archaic Delight!

This story was set 100 years ago in 1921 New York City. It was very interesting to hear about life in those times. The only thing that made me cringe was the portrayal of the only black character in the story. He was described as someone the Queens had “adopted” and he functioned in their household as an all -around man servant. If I remember correctly he was described as being small, though whether he was a child or adult wasn’t clear.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

OK for a freebie.

Relationship between Queen junior and senior seems so forced. The author wants us so badly to like these people.... but they really are not tremendously likeable.

Ellery is an unveiled recreation of Sherlock Holmes in almost every way.

His father could not be more annoying in the way he is constantly putting his own son into the limelight and proclaiming what a genius he is.

Inspector Queen has bipolar disorder.

We are supposed to feel like we’ve known the queens and their quirks forever. That much is blatantly obvious to the point of being sickening.

Narrator is most distinguished only by the fact that he is NOT remarkably obnoxious or annoying. Not remarkably talented or interesting either... but at least he doesn’t make the average book even worse.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Be aware

Be aware that you're listening to a book written ~80-90 years ago. No technology, misogyny the norm, racism the norm. Did not finish as was just too irritating. O.K. if you are able to look past the cultural differences.

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3 people found this helpful

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    3 out of 5 stars
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Okay for a freebie

Yep, it’s old fashioned, and some things will come across as offensive. The beginning was a bit tedious and uninteresting in its set up. The middle unfolding of the mystery became more interesting, although less so for me once they introduced the “big” reason. Much of the long wrap up was redundant, so I sped it up substantially to get to the end and find out the culprit (who was unsatisfying). I might grab another one though, because I listen to so many that even average three-star books make good enough background company while doing other things.

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1 person found this helpful