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Average Jones

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"You have one rare faculty, Jones. You can, when you choose, sharpen the pencil of your mind to a very fine point. Specialize, my boy, specialize."

Adrian Van Reypen Egerton Jones —"Average," to his friends—has spent the five years since graduation from college "specializing in life," indulging his wanderlust and living comfortably on twenty-five thousand a year. In order to inherit the millions that his late uncle has bequeathed, Average must spend five continuous years as a resident of New York City. Already bored, he is advised by his friends Waldemar and Bertram to take up a hobby. Waldemar, a newspaper owner, suggests that he become an "Ad-Visor"—someone who investigates classified ads on behalf of clients to root out swindlers.

As his college professor had opined, Jones possesses a particular singularity of focus, which allows him to notice details that others miss. In the process of investigating unusual and downright bizarre advertisements, he stumbles into solving actual crimes—and he finds he was born to it. Why would someone advertise for a musician to play a B-flat trombone in a certain street at a specific time of day? Or offer an unusually large reward for information about the death of a bulldog? What can be the meaning of a message written entirely in pinpricks? Who is the man who speaks only in Latin? These and other tantalizing puzzles will leave the reader eager to spend more time with the decidedly not-Average Jones.

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    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2022
      Ten detective stories about a self-described "Ad-Visor" that the versatile and once popular but now largely forgotten Adams (1871-1958) originally collected in 1911. The greatest stroke of originality here is to give facetious New York socialite Adrian Van Reypen Egerton Jones a thirst for a hobby that turns out to be advertising, a medium in which he soon becomes an expert, and to present cryptic, enigmatic, or otherwise tantalizing ads that lead him to criminal investigation. Although some of the resulting stories are routine--Jones searches for a doctor's missing son in "Open Trail" and a jeweled necklace in "Blue Fires," pursues a veiled threat to the governor's life in "The One Best Bet," and answers an ad seeking a man without a family for dangerous but well-paying work in the two-part "The Mercy Sign"--others revolve around ads and crimes that are equally original. "The B-Flat Trombone" invites Jones to connect a stolid German instrumentalist with the fiery bombing of a building outside which he's been hired to play. The trail to a deep-laid conspiracy runs through a series of canine poisonings in "Red Dot." Jones alertly decodes the hidden threats in a series of ads in "Pin Pricks," asks why someone would run a very public ad demanding a $50,000 ransom for a missing boy in "Big Print," and masquerades as mute in order to expose an ingenious fraud in "The Man Who Spoke Latin." "The Million-Dollar Dog," whose heroine's recent inheritance depends on her care for her late grandmother's dog, is the most conventional of all the stories, but it ends on such a high note that no one will complain. Uneven work that at its clever, resourceful best sows the seeds of mystery's golden age.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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