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Death of a Doxy

Death of a Doxy is a Nero Wolfe detective novel by Rex Stout, first published by Viking Press in 1966.

Death of a Doxy
AuthorRex Stout
Cover artistBill English
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesNero Wolfe
GenreDetective fiction
PublisherViking Press
Publication date
August 19, 1966
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
Pages186 pp. (first edition)
OCLC12137566
Preceded byThe Doorbell Rang 
Followed byThe Father Hunt 

Plot introduction Edit

"My sister was a what?"
"D, O, X, Y, doxy. I happen to like that better than concubine or paramour or mistress. I don't—"
I stopped because I had to, to protect my face.

— Archie Goodwin, conversing with Stella Fleming in Death of a Doxy, chapter 5

Orrie Cather, one of Wolfe's operatives, has been secretly seeing a wealthy man's kept mistress at her secret lovenest. He is arrested when she turns up dead.

Orrie is the only one of Wolfe's operatives to have the plot of two Stout books turn on his actions: Death of a Doxy and Stout's final work, A Family Affair.

Plot summary Edit

 
Illustrated by Lou Feck, an abridged version of Death of a Doxy appeared in Argosy magazine (June 1967)

Orrie is finally going to tie the knot. He is engaged to marry Jill Hardy, a stewardess. But for months, Orrie's also been keeping company with Isabel Kerr, an ex-showgirl. Orrie has some time available, because Jill works international flights. Isabel also has time available, because she no longer performs: rather, she occupies a plush apartment that is paid for by another gentleman friend who visits her just two or three times a week.

Isabel objects to Orrie's marriage plans. She has taken some of his personal and professional belongings and stashed them in her apartment. Isabel threatens to show them to Jill and thus quash the marriage. So, Orrie asks Archie to get into Isabel's apartment, find his possessions, and get them back. When Archie does enter the apartment, he finds not Orrie's belongings but Isabel's body. Archie withdraws to meet with Orrie, but otherwise keeps the news to himself.

Isabel's sister Stella later discovers the body. The police find Orrie's possessions in the apartment and arrest him on suspicion of murder. In a meeting to consider whether Orrie is guilty, Wolfe, Archie, and Fred are all unsure, but Saul—via some convoluted reasoning—concludes that he is innocent, and Wolfe undertakes to demonstrate it.

Wolfe must determine who knew about Isabel's apartment. Orrie has given Archie some names—Avery Ballou, who pays the bills, Stella Fleming and her husband Barry, and a nightclub singer named Julie Jaquette. Archie visits Stella and Barry, and learns that Stella is frantic to keep a lid on the nature of her sister's living arrangements. Stella's concern for Isabel's reputation is such that she tries to claw Archie's face when he refers to Isabel as a "doxy" (prostitute).

Archie corrals a reluctant Ballou, and Wolfe coerces his cooperation by threatening disclosure of his relationship with Isabel. It turns out that Ballou has already been subjected to blackmail, by someone named Milton Thales. Ballou thinks that Thales is really Orrie, but Wolfe deduces Thales' true identity and assumes that he is Isabel's murderer.

Wolfe sends Saul to bring Julie Jaquette. When she dances into Wolfe's office, Miss Jaquette puts on a performance, first singing and then demanding to see Wolfe's orchids. She displays a cynicism regarding human behavior that Wolfe regards as similar to his own. Julie agrees to act as bait for the murderer and is nearly killed herself. For her protection, she is moved into the brownstone, where she helps Wolfe and Archie force Thales' hand after Wolfe offers $50,000 cash for her assistance.

The unfamiliar word Edit

"Like all of us, Wolfe has his favorite words, phrases, and sayings," wrote William S. Baring-Gould. "Among the words, many are unusual and some are abstruse."[1]

Nero Wolfe's erudite vocabulary is one of the hallmarks of the character. Examples of unfamiliar words—or unfamiliar uses of words that some would otherwise consider familiar—are found throughout the corpus. Death of a Doxy contains several examples, including the following:

  • "Incumbency". Chapter 7; perhaps unfamiliar in the sense that Wolfe uses it: "Mr. Cather has worked for me, on occasion, for years, and I am under an incumbency."
  • "Strephon". Chapter 7. "Strephon is the lover of Urania in Sir Philip Sidney's Arcadia," wrote Rev. Frederick G. Gotwald in The Nero Wolfe Companion. "It became the conventional name for a lover in literature."[2] Dating to 1580, the character later appears in Jonathan Swift's "Strephon and Chloe" (1731); Happy Arcadia (1872), a one-act musical play with libretto by W. S. Gilbert; and Gilbert and Sullivan's Iolanthe (1882).
  • "Juridically". Chapter 13. (This word also appears in adjectival form in The League of Frightened Men and Prisoner's Base.)
  • "Chaldean". Chapter 16.

Cast of characters Edit

  • Nero Wolfe: The private investigator
  • Archie Goodwin: Wolfe's assistant (and the narrator of all Wolfe stories)
  • Orrie Cather: An operative frequently in Wolfe's employ, along with Saul Panzer and Fred Durkin. Orrie's activities in this book are very limited, but the plot centers on his dalliance with Isabel Kerr.
  • Jill Hardy: An airline attendant, then termed "stewardess", and Orrie's fiancée
  • Isabel Kerr: The murder victim, occupant of a plush apartment, of whom a newspaper wrote, "It does not appear that Miss Kerr was employed anywhere or engaged in any regular activity."
  • Stella Fleming: Isabel's sister, whose greatest fear is that Isabel's lifestyle will be publicized
  • Barry Fleming: Stella's husband, a mathematics professor
  • Avery Ballou: A CEO, a devotee of the works of Rudyard Kipling, and the source of Miss Kerr's rent and other living expenses
  • Julie Jaquette (stage name of Amy Jackson): A successful nightclub singer and Isabel Kerr's best friend
  • Inspector Cramer: Representing Manhattan Homicide

Reviews and commentary Edit

  • Jacques Barzun and Wendell Hertig Taylor, A Catalogue of Crime—First-rate Stout done at the age of 80. The tightness of the plot, the wit, and the people are done with sureness and speed, so that the book, though short, gives one the sense of having lived through a long stretch of tense expectation. New roles, too, for Orrie Cather, Cramer, and Wolfe in relation to a murder which they are not asked to investigate. Wolfe gets his $50,000 fee, which one hopes he splits with the author.[3]
  • Terry Teachout, About Last Night, (January 12, 2009)—Rex Stout's witty, fast-moving prose hasn't dated a day, while Wolfe himself is one of the enduringly great eccentrics of popular fiction. I've spent the past four decades reading and re-reading Stout's novels for pleasure, and they have yet to lose their savor ... It is to revel in such writing that I return time and again to Stout's books, and in particular to The League of Frightened Men, Some Buried Caesar, The Silent Speaker, Too Many Women, Murder by the Book, Before Midnight, Plot It Yourself, Too Many Clients, The Doorbell Rang, and Death of a Doxy, which are for me the best of all the full-length Wolfe novels.

Adaptations Edit

A Nero Wolfe Mystery (A&E Network) Edit

An adaptation of Death of a Doxy opened the second season of the A&E TV series A Nero Wolfe Mystery (2001–2002). Directed by Timothy Hutton from a teleplay by Sharon Elizabeth Doyle, "Death of a Doxy" aired April 14, 2002, on A&E.

Timothy Hutton is Archie Goodwin; Maury Chaykin is Nero Wolfe. Other members of the cast (in credits order) include Colin Fox (Fritz Brenner), Bill Smitrovich (Inspector Cramer), Conrad Dunn (Saul Panzer), Trent McMullen (Orrie Cather), Fulvio Cecere (Fred Durkin), Kari Matchett (Julie Jaquette/Lily Rowan), James Tolkan (Avery Ballou), Christine Brubaker (Stella Fleming), Carlo Rota (Barry Fleming), Nicky Guadagni (Mrs. Ballou), Hayley Verlyn (Isabel Kerr), Janine Theriault (Jill Hardy), George Plimpton (Nathaniel Parker) and Julian Richings (Poet).

In addition to original music by Nero Wolfe composer Michael Small, the soundtrack includes music by Rick Cassman and Vyv Hope-Scott, Graham de Wilde, Antonín Dvořák, Ken Miller and David Steinberg.[4]

In North America, A Nero Wolfe Mystery is available on Region 1 DVD from A&E Home Video (ISBN 0-7670-8893-X). The DVD release presents the 4:3 pan and scan version of "Death of a Doxy" rather than A&E's 16:9 letterboxed version.[5]

"Death of a Doxy" is one of the Nero Wolfe episodes released on Region 2 DVD in the Netherlands by Just Entertainment, under license from FremantleMedia Enterprises. A Nero Wolfe Mystery—Serie 2 (2010) was the first DVD release of the international version of the episode, which includes a brief closing scene in which Orrie visits the brownstone. The Netherlands release has optional Dutch subtitles and, like the A&E DVD release, presents the episode in 4:3 pan and scan rather than its 16:9 aspect ratio for widescreen viewing.[6]

Nero Wolfe (Paramount Television) Edit

Death of a Doxy was adapted as "What Happened to April", the ninth episode of Nero Wolfe (1981), an NBC TV series starring William Conrad as Nero Wolfe and Lee Horsley as Archie Goodwin. Other members of the regular cast include George Voskovec (Fritz Brenner), Robert Coote (Theodore Horstmann), George Wyner (Saul Panzer) and Allan Miller (Inspector Cramer). Guest stars include Richard Anderson (Chester Winslow [Avery Ballou]), Deborah Fallender (Julie Keen [Jaquette]) and Laurie Heineman (Donna MacKenzie [Stella Fleming]). Directed by Edward M. Abroms from a teleplay by Stephen Downing, "What Happened to April" aired March 20, 1981.

Publication history Edit

In his limited-edition pamphlet, Collecting Mystery Fiction #10, Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe Part II, Otto Penzler describes the first edition of Death of a Doxy: "Yellow boards, gray cloth spine; front cover printed with a blue design; spine printed with blue lettering; rear cover blank. Issued in a red, black, and white dust photographic wrapper which has been die cut to reveal the blue printed design on the front cover. … The dust wrapper is noteworthy for its ugliness and the singularly misconceived design element of the pointess die cut."[8]
In April 2006, Firsts: The Book Collector's Magazine estimated that the first edition of Death of a Doxy had a value of between $100 and $200. The estimate is for a copy in very good to fine condition in a like dustjacket.[9]
The far less valuable Viking book club edition may be distinguished from the first edition in three ways:
  • The dust jacket has "Book Club Edition" printed on the inside front flap, and the price is absent (first editions may be price clipped if they were given as gifts).
  • Book club editions are sometimes thinner and always taller (usually a quarter of an inch) than first editions.
  • Book club editions are bound in cardboard, and first editions are bound in cloth (or have at least a cloth spine).[10]
  • 1966, Toronto Star Weekly, abridged, October 1966
  • 1966, Toronto: Macmillan, 1966, hardcover
  • 1967, London: Collins Crime Club, June 5, 1967, hardcover
  • 1967, Argosy, June 1967 (abridged)
  • 1967, New York: Bantam #F3476, August 1967, paperback
  • 1969, London: Fontana, 1969, paperback
  • 1995, New York: Bantam Crime Line ISBN 0-553-27606-9 October 1995, paperback, Rex Stout Library edition with introduction by Sandra West Prowell
  • 2002, Auburn, California: The Audio Partners Publishing Corp., Mystery Masters ISBN 1-57270-269-9 July 2002, audio cassette (unabridged, read by Michael Prichard)
  • 2010, New York: Bantam Crimeline ISBN 978-0-307-75586-5 July 21, 2010, e-book

References Edit

  1. ^ Baring-Gould, William S., Nero Wolfe of West Thirty-Fifth Street. New York: Viking Press, 1969, hardcover, page 9
  2. ^ Gotwald, Rev. Frederick G., The Nero Wolfe Companion, volume 9, page 10
  3. ^ Barzun, Jacques and Taylor, Wendell Hertig. A Catalogue of Crime. New York: Harper & Row. 1971, revised and enlarged edition 1989. ISBN 0-06-015796-8
  4. ^ Rick Cassman and Vyv Hope-Scott, "Tristan's Boutique"; Carlin Production Music CAR 290, Kitsch – Light and Easy/Cheesy (track 14). Graham de Wilde, "Private Investigator"; KPM Music Ltd. KPM 39, Atmospheric Journeys 2 (track 45). Antonín Dvořák, Humoresque in G Flat, Op. 101, No. 7; KPM Music Ltd. KPM CS 7, Light Classics Volume One (track 7). Ken Miller, "King Swing"; 5 Alarm Music, Swing (iTunes Store). David Steinberg, "Tom Toms Jam"; 5 Alarm Music, Swing (iTunes Store). Additional soundtrack details at the Internet Movie Database and The Wolfe Pack May 14, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, official site of the Nero Wolfe Society
  5. ^ VHS recording created for NW Production Services, Inc., labelled as follows: NERO WOLFE: "DEATH OF A DOXY" EPS201 A&E 16 X 9 ... 11 JUNE 02
  6. ^ A Nero Wolfe Mystery—Serie 2, February 11, 2010; EAN 8717344739801. Two-disc set features include "Over My Dead Body" (presented as a 90-minute film with a single set of titles and credits) and "Death of a Doxy." Screen format is 4:3 full frame. Licensed by FremantleMedia Enterprises to Just Entertainment 2011-07-24 at the Wayback Machine. (Retrieved December 31, 2010)
  7. ^ Townsend, Guy M., Rex Stout: An Annotated Primary and Secondary Bibliography (1980, New York: Garland Publishing; ISBN 0-8240-9479-4), pp. 41–42. John McAleer, Judson Sapp and Arriean Schemer are associate editors of this definitive publication history.
  8. ^ Penzler, Otto, Collecting Mystery Fiction #10, Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe Part II (2001, New York: The Mysterious Bookshop, limited edition of 250 copies), pp. 21–22
  9. ^ Smiley, Robin H., "Rex Stout: A Checklist of Primary First Editions." Firsts: The Book Collector's Magazine (Volume 16, Number 4), April 2006, p. 35
  10. ^ Penzler, Otto, Collecting Mystery Fiction #9, Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe Part I, pp. 19–20

External links Edit

  • A Nero Wolfe Mystery—"Death of a Doxy" at IMDb
  • Nero Wolfe—"What Happened to April" at IMDb

death, doxy, nero, wolfe, detective, novel, stout, first, published, viking, press, 1966, authorrex, stoutcover, artistbill, englishcountryunited, stateslanguageenglishseriesnero, wolfegenredetective, fictionpublisherviking, presspublication, dateaugust, 1966m. Death of a Doxy is a Nero Wolfe detective novel by Rex Stout first published by Viking Press in 1966 Death of a DoxyAuthorRex StoutCover artistBill EnglishCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishSeriesNero WolfeGenreDetective fictionPublisherViking PressPublication dateAugust 19 1966Media typePrint Hardcover Pages186 pp first edition OCLC12137566Preceded byThe Doorbell Rang Followed byThe Father Hunt This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article November 2021 Contents 1 Plot introduction 2 Plot summary 3 The unfamiliar word 4 Cast of characters 5 Reviews and commentary 6 Adaptations 6 1 A Nero Wolfe Mystery A amp E Network 6 2 Nero Wolfe Paramount Television 7 Publication history 8 References 9 External linksPlot introduction Edit My sister was a what D O X Y doxy I happen to like that better than concubine or paramour or mistress I don t I stopped because I had to to protect my face Archie Goodwin conversing with Stella Fleming in Death of a Doxy chapter 5 Orrie Cather one of Wolfe s operatives has been secretly seeing a wealthy man s kept mistress at her secret lovenest He is arrested when she turns up dead Orrie is the only one of Wolfe s operatives to have the plot of two Stout books turn on his actions Death of a Doxy and Stout s final work A Family Affair Plot summary Edit nbsp Illustrated by Lou Feck an abridged version of Death of a Doxy appeared in Argosy magazine June 1967 Orrie is finally going to tie the knot He is engaged to marry Jill Hardy a stewardess But for months Orrie s also been keeping company with Isabel Kerr an ex showgirl Orrie has some time available because Jill works international flights Isabel also has time available because she no longer performs rather she occupies a plush apartment that is paid for by another gentleman friend who visits her just two or three times a week Isabel objects to Orrie s marriage plans She has taken some of his personal and professional belongings and stashed them in her apartment Isabel threatens to show them to Jill and thus quash the marriage So Orrie asks Archie to get into Isabel s apartment find his possessions and get them back When Archie does enter the apartment he finds not Orrie s belongings but Isabel s body Archie withdraws to meet with Orrie but otherwise keeps the news to himself Isabel s sister Stella later discovers the body The police find Orrie s possessions in the apartment and arrest him on suspicion of murder In a meeting to consider whether Orrie is guilty Wolfe Archie and Fred are all unsure but Saul via some convoluted reasoning concludes that he is innocent and Wolfe undertakes to demonstrate it Wolfe must determine who knew about Isabel s apartment Orrie has given Archie some names Avery Ballou who pays the bills Stella Fleming and her husband Barry and a nightclub singer named Julie Jaquette Archie visits Stella and Barry and learns that Stella is frantic to keep a lid on the nature of her sister s living arrangements Stella s concern for Isabel s reputation is such that she tries to claw Archie s face when he refers to Isabel as a doxy prostitute Archie corrals a reluctant Ballou and Wolfe coerces his cooperation by threatening disclosure of his relationship with Isabel It turns out that Ballou has already been subjected to blackmail by someone named Milton Thales Ballou thinks that Thales is really Orrie but Wolfe deduces Thales true identity and assumes that he is Isabel s murderer Wolfe sends Saul to bring Julie Jaquette When she dances into Wolfe s office Miss Jaquette puts on a performance first singing and then demanding to see Wolfe s orchids She displays a cynicism regarding human behavior that Wolfe regards as similar to his own Julie agrees to act as bait for the murderer and is nearly killed herself For her protection she is moved into the brownstone where she helps Wolfe and Archie force Thales hand after Wolfe offers 50 000 cash for her assistance The unfamiliar word Edit Like all of us Wolfe has his favorite words phrases and sayings wrote William S Baring Gould Among the words many are unusual and some are abstruse 1 Nero Wolfe s erudite vocabulary is one of the hallmarks of the character Examples of unfamiliar words or unfamiliar uses of words that some would otherwise consider familiar are found throughout the corpus Death of a Doxy contains several examples including the following Incumbency Chapter 7 perhaps unfamiliar in the sense that Wolfe uses it Mr Cather has worked for me on occasion for years and I am under an incumbency Strephon Chapter 7 Strephon is the lover of Urania in Sir Philip Sidney s Arcadia wrote Rev Frederick G Gotwald in The Nero Wolfe Companion It became the conventional name for a lover in literature 2 Dating to 1580 the character later appears in Jonathan Swift s Strephon and Chloe 1731 Happy Arcadia 1872 a one act musical play with libretto by W S Gilbert and Gilbert and Sullivan s Iolanthe 1882 Juridically Chapter 13 This word also appears in adjectival form in The League of Frightened Men and Prisoner s Base Chaldean Chapter 16 Cast of characters EditNero Wolfe The private investigator Archie Goodwin Wolfe s assistant and the narrator of all Wolfe stories Orrie Cather An operative frequently in Wolfe s employ along with Saul Panzer and Fred Durkin Orrie s activities in this book are very limited but the plot centers on his dalliance with Isabel Kerr Jill Hardy An airline attendant then termed stewardess and Orrie s fiancee Isabel Kerr The murder victim occupant of a plush apartment of whom a newspaper wrote It does not appear that Miss Kerr was employed anywhere or engaged in any regular activity Stella Fleming Isabel s sister whose greatest fear is that Isabel s lifestyle will be publicized Barry Fleming Stella s husband a mathematics professor Avery Ballou A CEO a devotee of the works of Rudyard Kipling and the source of Miss Kerr s rent and other living expenses Julie Jaquette stage name of Amy Jackson A successful nightclub singer and Isabel Kerr s best friend Inspector Cramer Representing Manhattan HomicideReviews and commentary EditJacques Barzun and Wendell Hertig Taylor A Catalogue of Crime First rate Stout done at the age of 80 The tightness of the plot the wit and the people are done with sureness and speed so that the book though short gives one the sense of having lived through a long stretch of tense expectation New roles too for Orrie Cather Cramer and Wolfe in relation to a murder which they are not asked to investigate Wolfe gets his 50 000 fee which one hopes he splits with the author 3 Terry Teachout About Last Night Forty years with Nero Wolfe January 12 2009 Rex Stout s witty fast moving prose hasn t dated a day while Wolfe himself is one of the enduringly great eccentrics of popular fiction I ve spent the past four decades reading and re reading Stout s novels for pleasure and they have yet to lose their savor It is to revel in such writing that I return time and again to Stout s books and in particular to The League of Frightened Men Some Buried Caesar The Silent Speaker Too Many Women Murder by the Book Before Midnight Plot It Yourself Too Many Clients The Doorbell Rang and Death of a Doxy which are for me the best of all the full length Wolfe novels Adaptations EditA Nero Wolfe Mystery A amp E Network Edit An adaptation of Death of a Doxy opened the second season of the A amp E TV series A Nero Wolfe Mystery 2001 2002 Directed by Timothy Hutton from a teleplay by Sharon Elizabeth Doyle Death of a Doxy aired April 14 2002 on A amp E Timothy Hutton is Archie Goodwin Maury Chaykin is Nero Wolfe Other members of the cast in credits order include Colin Fox Fritz Brenner Bill Smitrovich Inspector Cramer Conrad Dunn Saul Panzer Trent McMullen Orrie Cather Fulvio Cecere Fred Durkin Kari Matchett Julie Jaquette Lily Rowan James Tolkan Avery Ballou Christine Brubaker Stella Fleming Carlo Rota Barry Fleming Nicky Guadagni Mrs Ballou Hayley Verlyn Isabel Kerr Janine Theriault Jill Hardy George Plimpton Nathaniel Parker and Julian Richings Poet In addition to original music by Nero Wolfe composer Michael Small the soundtrack includes music by Rick Cassman and Vyv Hope Scott Graham de Wilde Antonin Dvorak Ken Miller and David Steinberg 4 In North America A Nero Wolfe Mystery is available on Region 1 DVD from A amp E Home Video ISBN 0 7670 8893 X The DVD release presents the 4 3 pan and scan version of Death of a Doxy rather than A amp E s 16 9 letterboxed version 5 Death of a Doxy is one of the Nero Wolfe episodes released on Region 2 DVD in the Netherlands by Just Entertainment under license from FremantleMedia Enterprises A Nero Wolfe Mystery Serie 2 2010 was the first DVD release of the international version of the episode which includes a brief closing scene in which Orrie visits the brownstone The Netherlands release has optional Dutch subtitles and like the A amp E DVD release presents the episode in 4 3 pan and scan rather than its 16 9 aspect ratio for widescreen viewing 6 Nero Wolfe Paramount Television Edit Death of a Doxy was adapted as What Happened to April the ninth episode of Nero Wolfe 1981 an NBC TV series starring William Conrad as Nero Wolfe and Lee Horsley as Archie Goodwin Other members of the regular cast include George Voskovec Fritz Brenner Robert Coote Theodore Horstmann George Wyner Saul Panzer and Allan Miller Inspector Cramer Guest stars include Richard Anderson Chester Winslow Avery Ballou Deborah Fallender Julie Keen Jaquette and Laurie Heineman Donna MacKenzie Stella Fleming Directed by Edward M Abroms from a teleplay by Stephen Downing What Happened to April aired March 20 1981 Publication history Edit1966 New York The Viking Press August 19 1966 hardcover 7 In his limited edition pamphlet Collecting Mystery Fiction 10 Rex Stout s Nero Wolfe Part II Otto Penzler describes the first edition of Death of a Doxy Yellow boards gray cloth spine front cover printed with a blue design spine printed with blue lettering rear cover blank Issued in a red black and white dust photographic wrapper which has been die cut to reveal the blue printed design on the front cover The dust wrapper is noteworthy for its ugliness and the singularly misconceived design element of the pointess die cut 8 In April 2006 Firsts The Book Collector s Magazine estimated that the first edition of Death of a Doxy had a value of between 100 and 200 The estimate is for a copy in very good to fine condition in a like dustjacket 9 1966 New York Viking Mystery Guild October 1966 hardcoverThe far less valuable Viking book club edition may be distinguished from the first edition in three ways The dust jacket has Book Club Edition printed on the inside front flap and the price is absent first editions may be price clipped if they were given as gifts Book club editions are sometimes thinner and always taller usually a quarter of an inch than first editions Book club editions are bound in cardboard and first editions are bound in cloth or have at least a cloth spine 10 dd 1966 Toronto Star Weekly abridged October 1966 1966 Toronto Macmillan 1966 hardcover 1967 London Collins Crime Club June 5 1967 hardcover 1967 Argosy June 1967 abridged 1967 New York Bantam F3476 August 1967 paperback 1969 London Fontana 1969 paperback 1995 New York Bantam Crime Line ISBN 0 553 27606 9 October 1995 paperback Rex Stout Library edition with introduction by Sandra West Prowell 2002 Auburn California The Audio Partners Publishing Corp Mystery Masters ISBN 1 57270 269 9 July 2002 audio cassette unabridged read by Michael Prichard 2010 New York Bantam Crimeline ISBN 978 0 307 75586 5 July 21 2010 e bookReferences Edit Baring Gould William S Nero Wolfe of West Thirty Fifth Street New York Viking Press 1969 hardcover page 9 Gotwald Rev Frederick G The Nero Wolfe Companion volume 9 page 10 Barzun Jacques and Taylor Wendell Hertig A Catalogue of Crime New York Harper amp Row 1971 revised and enlarged edition 1989 ISBN 0 06 015796 8 Rick Cassman and Vyv Hope Scott Tristan s Boutique Carlin Production Music CAR 290 Kitsch Light and Easy Cheesy track 14 Graham de Wilde Private Investigator KPM Music Ltd KPM 39 Atmospheric Journeys 2 track 45 Antonin Dvorak Humoresque in G Flat Op 101 No 7 KPM Music Ltd KPM CS 7 Light Classics Volume One track 7 Ken Miller King Swing 5 Alarm Music Swing iTunes Store David Steinberg Tom Toms Jam 5 Alarm Music Swing iTunes Store Additional soundtrack details at the Internet Movie Database and The Wolfe Pack Archived May 14 2013 at the Wayback Machine official site of the Nero Wolfe Society VHS recording created for NW Production Services Inc labelled as follows NERO WOLFE DEATH OF A DOXY EPS201 A amp E 16 X 9 11 JUNE 02 A Nero Wolfe Mystery Serie 2 February 11 2010 EAN 8717344739801 Two disc set features include Over My Dead Body presented as a 90 minute film with a single set of titles and credits and Death of a Doxy Screen format is 4 3 full frame Licensed by FremantleMedia Enterprises to Just Entertainment Archived 2011 07 24 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved December 31 2010 Townsend Guy M Rex Stout An Annotated Primary and Secondary Bibliography 1980 New York Garland Publishing ISBN 0 8240 9479 4 pp 41 42 John McAleer Judson Sapp and Arriean Schemer are associate editors of this definitive publication history Penzler Otto Collecting Mystery Fiction 10 Rex Stout s Nero Wolfe Part II 2001 New York The Mysterious Bookshop limited edition of 250 copies pp 21 22 Smiley Robin H Rex Stout A Checklist of Primary First Editions Firsts The Book Collector s Magazine Volume 16 Number 4 April 2006 p 35 Penzler Otto Collecting Mystery Fiction 9 Rex Stout s Nero Wolfe Part I pp 19 20External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Death of a Doxy A Nero Wolfe Mystery Death of a Doxy at IMDb Nero Wolfe What Happened to April at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Death of a Doxy amp oldid 1056860390, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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