About the author: Rex Stout (1886 – 1975) was an American writer noted for his detective fiction. His best-known characters are the detective Nero Wolfe and his assistant Archie Goodwin, who were featured in 33 novels and 39 novellas between 1934 and 1975. (wikipedia). (bibliography)
This title contains three novellas.
Poison à la Carte: Wolfe's cook, Fritz Brenner, is hired by a gourmet club to prepare their annual dinner. Ten members are seated, and the courses are served by ten women hired from an acting agency. One member, Vincent Pyle, a theatrical producer, is known by several of the women as having made advances toward them. He suddenly becomes ill and within hours is dead of aresenic poisoning. Wolfe's task is to find which of the ten women did it.
Mini-review: It is difficult to follow which woman served which member unless it is charted out, and I didn't bother. They narrow the field down quickly, then use a clever ruse to make the killer reveal herself. The coaching and use of Zoltan, a kitchen worker, is quite enjoyable.
Method Three for Murder: Archie has one of his occasional spats with Wolfe and, as usual, quits. On his way out the door, he encounters Mira Holt coming in. She hires him on the spot for a consultation, but has a thin story. Complicating matters is the cab at the curb, empty except for a dead woman inside. Archie suggests to her three methods of dealing with the police: Say nothing, Say the whole truth, or pick a simple lie and stick to it.
Mini-review: There's a few too many characters for this short novella, and the timeline analysis is a bit overdone, but the major characters are well done. The tough-talking woman cabbie is a delight.
The Rodeo Murder:
Mini-review: