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Author name: John Dickson Carr

 : The Burning Court
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Used Price: $14.21
Collectible Price: $14.99






Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.52
EAN num: 9780930330279
ISBN number: 0930330277
Label: International Polygonics
Manufacturer: International Polygonics
Quantity: 1
Printing Date: 1985-12
Publishing house: International Polygonics
Sale Popularity Level: 1291116
Studio: International Polygonics




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Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 1 out of 5 stars - Talky, Farfetched Mystery
John Dickson Carr excelled at creating "impossible" crimes and then explaining how they occurred. To enjoy Carr's mysteries, you must like puzzles that have intricate solutions, and not mind that a few aspects may be difficult to follow. While Carr's solutions are clever, these mysteries were written in the 1930s to 1950s, so there may be an occasional clue that doesn't hold up in today's CSI era. Though some will disagree, Carr's most entertaining mysteries are those that feature Sir Henry Merrivale (written under the name Carter Dickson).

Carr's biographer called THE BURNING COURT probably his most powerful book, but to me it is one of his worst. The characters talk and talk for almost 200 pages as they try to figure out how an old man was poisoned, and how his corpse disappeared from an apparently inaccessible crypt. One twist requires a supposedly intelligent character to accept a glass of sherry from the poisoner he is about to expose and drink it! (Surprise: he regrets it.) Another twist involves a ridiculous epilogue which undercuts everything that came before.

There's a reason why the solution-giver in TBC isn't one of Carr's famous detectives, and it isn't a good one. Try a Sir Henry Merrivale mystery instead.



Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - What an ending, what a book.
The Burning Court is John Dickson Carr's most famous independent novel. This is a good thing, for no matter which detective he had(Fell or Merrivale), they would have been wrong.

Edward Stevens is looking at a book manuscript of true crime. This book looks at the trial of murder's. Stevens thoughts drift to his boss's uncle, Miles Despard. Miles Despard died of gasteroenteritis, and was sealed up in the familly crypt. Before he died, one of the servents saw a glowing woman enter the room through a bricked up door, and leave the same way. After the man died, a piec of string tied in nine knots was found under his pillow.

Stevens push's this out of his mind. He opens the book, and sees the picture of Marie D'Aubrey, exicuted for murder in 1869. It is a picture of his wife!

Allthough their seems to be a supernatural reason for all these things, Stevens sets out to prove their is a logical solution. Little does he know, things aren't as they seem.



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - An unusual gem from this prolific genre writer
John Dickson Carr is an author for whom I've always had a lot of respect even though my responses to his books tend to vary widely. An American whose style and locale was most often Great Britain, he had a long and substantial career not only as a genre novelist but also as a successful writer of radio dramas. At his best, he's the master of "locked-room conundrums" with a lot of local colour and often a patina of supernatural implications even when his accustomed recurring characters (Dr. Gideon Fell, for example) tend to be on hand to gradually debunk the supernatural elements.

Some of his novels can seem a bit overwrought or over-the-top, the plot details too labored or characterizations too eccentric to really ring true. When he occasionally spreads the melodrama on like so much clotted cream, there are times when the exaggeration of someone like Gideon Fell can irritate.

I would have to say, however, that this book seems to be unique in Carr's output, and easily the best novel of his that I've yet encountered. The characterizations are rich and detailed, and ring true. The desperation of our protagonist, Edward Stevens, as he gradually cannot help but suspect his wife of some complicity in some evil activity in a Philadelphia suburb, is moving and well-drawn. The novel is populated with vivid characters who are never stereotypes. In fact, in many ways the story feels fairly contemporary (even though it was written in 1937) in terms of the behavior of the principal characters and the avoidance of stereotypes in the behavior of the women.

Best of all, the book races forward with both great momentum and an admirable economy. Nothing is extraneous, and a creepy mood (among what is essentially a conventional suburb for well-to-do business types) is established within the very first chapter and maintained masterfully and page-turningly for the entire book.

Unlike most of Carr's books, the supernatural aspect is not readily played down or explained away. A genuine sense of something beyond the rational keeps a gnawing presence throughout, even though at times we are made aware of potential "normal" possible explanations for this or that occurence. Carr keeps us a bit off-balance for the entire novel, and in certain ways the book is a masterpiece of manipulating a steady stream of content and imagery which keeps us perpetually thinking and guessing. We are never allowed to be lulled into complacency, and the stakes are kept high for the characters we get to know the best. The pace of the book is so well-maintained that there's a certain exhilaration to it.

In the best traditions of Poe, Bierce or Hawthorne (though with a setting a style more contemporary), this book deserves a distinguished place in the pantheon of American supernatural literature. Uneasiness follows us all the way, and there is certainly not another novel of Carr's in which I had felt I was in surer hands. This is a rather creepy roller-coaster ride of ghostly doings finding their way inexplicably into the household of a conventional suburbanite, and in my opinion Carr never wrote anything better than this one.



Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Spend an evening at the Burning Court
Whew! This is John Dickson Carr at his puzzling, ingenious, and atmospheric best, with a sensational, stunning ending. The set-up sounds like a standard Carr plot: a wealthy man is murdered, apparently by poison in a locked room. Subsequently his body disappears from a seemingly impregnable family crypt. The author, the master of the locked-room mystery genre, surprises us, however, with different characters (his familiar series detectives do not appear), a different setting (rural Pennsylvania rather than Britain), and most importantly, a different type of logic in the case's solution. I don't want to be more specific than that so as not to spoil the conclusion.

The novel's main character is well-drawn and faces a very relateable and intense conflict over his efforts to keep his marriage together and both understand and protect his, he fears, troubled and in-trouble wife. The critic Julian Symons, in his idiosyncratic but insightful survey of crime fiction BLOODY MURDER, writes that Carr's fiction for the most part lacks "genuine feeling" (though he generally praises Carr highly). I can see how one could have this impression of Carr, because the coldly calculated puzzles are what one remembers most about his fiction, and are what he is justly most famous for. I think this criticism is off the mark, though, and this book illustrates why. We do vividly feel the narrator's love for his wife, growing panic at his quandry, and other moments of fear and exhilaration. Carr may be a master craftsman, but in this and many of his fine novels, his work is hardly cold or unfeeling.

I can see why some of the reviewers object both to the somewhat atypically dark tone of the ending as well as its internal logic, which are so different from those of most of the Carr/Dickson novels that his readers know and love. But to me that is rather the point--what is especially great about the author's books is that while we expect a certain type of characterization and plot development from him, sometimes he deliberately crosses us up! Carr was a master of the mystery novel form, and part of his mastery was his ability to play with readers' expectations and then subvert them, often with stunning effect, as in this classic, one-of-a-kind book.



Rated by buyers 4 out of 5 stars - Among Carr's Best - Supernatural Elements Heighten Suspense
The title, The Burning Court (1937), derives from the infamous Burning Court that extracted confessions from alleged witches through the use of the wheel and fire during the reign of Louis XIV. However, the setting for this story is not France, but in a small community outside Philadelphia in the spring of 1929.

John Dickson Carr remains famous for his ingenious (perhaps some would say too ingenious) locked room mysteries. The Burning Court mystery offers not one, but two locked rooms: first, a woman in seventeenth century dress is seen walking through a wall where a now bricked-up door once existed, and second, a recently buried body goes missing from a securely sealed, underground crypt. The atmosphere is one of horror and dread. The two occurrences defy logical analysis.

The Burning Court is among the best stories of John Dickson Carr, even though it is atypical in that Carr's legendary investigators (Dr. Gideon Fell, Sir Henry Merrivale, and Henri Ben Colin) are all absent. The capable Captain Brennan of the Philadelphia Police Department and the eccentric author-amateur detective, Gaudan Cross, appear in only this one story.

The Burning Court is completely typical, however, in that the solution is well beyond the reach of the reader. Over fifty pages the section titled Summing-Up slowly unravels these two related locked room puzzles. This summation is actually a continuation of the story in that new, critical information is revealed that helps disperse the supernatural fog. Likewise, this apparently complicated murder is shown to be quite straight-forward, but coincidental events (as often happens in a Carr story, and sometimes in life too) obfuscated matters to a remarkable extent.

The Burning Court is a fascinating story that makes enjoyable reading. Nonetheless, it is always fair to ask whether a John Dickson Carr solution is really fair. Carr has a tendency to withhold key information essential to the solution. The solutions to the two locked room puzzles in my view strayed into that gray area separating fairness from unfairness. (In a footnote Carr does refer the reader to past pages, suggesting that he might have recognized that he overly disguised his clues.)

In a final twist Carr reveals a second solution, a solution within a solution, just when the reader thinks this mystery is finally solved. Four stars to The Burning Court.

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