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Nero Wolfe

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Nero Wolfe is a brilliant, obese and eccentric fictional armchair detective created in 1934 by American mystery writer Rex Stout . Wolfe was born in Montenegro and keeps his past murky. He lives in a luxurious brownstone on West 35th Street in New York City, and he is loath to leave his home for business or anything that would keep him from reading his books, tending his orchids, or eating the gourmet meals prepared by his chef, Fritz Brenner . Archie Goodwin , Wolfe's sharp-witted, dapper young confidential assistant with an eye for attractive women, narrates the cases and does the legwork for the detective genius.

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72-516: Stout published 33 novels and 41 novellas and short stories featuring Wolfe from 1934 to 1975, with most of them set in New York City . The stories have been adapted for film, radio, television and the stage. The Nero Wolfe corpus was nominated for Best Mystery Series of the Century in 2000 at Bouchercon XXXI , the world's largest mystery convention, and Rex Stout was a nominee for Best Mystery Writer of

144-812: A manual laborer and later at a Yugoslavian daily newspaper, Narodni Glas ("The Voice of the Nation"), that was published in New York. As an American soldier he participated in combat on the Western front during the First World War . After the war he worked as a journalist and professional writer. All of Adamic's writings are based on his labor experiences in America and his former life in Slovenia. He achieved national acclaim in America in 1934 with his book The Native's Return , which

216-538: A California beach sometime in 1951, and left with the warning that he would be murdered if he continued writing about Yugoslavia. Ethel Sharp, Adamic's typist, claimed he had told her of an incident in October of 1950 in which four unidentified men visited Adamic's home and threateningly inquired about the progress of The Eagle and the Roots . However, Adamic was apparently unfazed by the visit. The episode had not been reported to

288-529: A battle with the elements. He's fighting his way through a raging blizzard, just sitting there comfortably looking at pictures of snowflakes. That's the advantage of being an artist, of having imagination." I said aloud, "You mustn't go to sleep, sir, it's fatal. You freeze to death." Reading is central to Nero Wolfe's life, and books are central to the plots of many of the stories. The floor-to-ceiling bookshelves lining Wolfe's office contain some 1,200 books ( Gambit , chapter 6)—the size of Stout's own library. In

360-412: A chain bolt, a bell that can be shut off as needed, and a pane of one-way glass , which enables Archie to see who is on the stoop before deciding whether to open the door. The front room is used as a waiting area for visitors while Archie informs Wolfe of their arrival, and also as a place for Archie to hide one visitor from another. Wolfe's bedroom is on the second floor of the brownstone, and Archie's

432-409: A closeup of Archie's paycheck in " Prisoner's Base ". Once he burned up a cookbook because it said to remove the hide from a ham end before putting it in the pot with lima beans. Which he loves most, food or words, is a tossup. Good food is a keystone (along with reading) of Wolfe's mostly leisured existence. He is both a gourmand and a gourmet, enjoying generous helpings of Fritz's cuisine three times

504-470: A comfortable and luxurious New York City brownstone on the south side of West 35th Street. The brownstone has three floors plus a large basement with living quarters, a rooftop greenhouse also with living quarters, and a small elevator, used almost exclusively by Wolfe. Other unique features include a timer-activated window-opening device that regulates the temperature in Wolfe's bedroom, an alarm system that sounds

576-410: A day to five. "I grinned at that, for I didn't believe it", Archie Goodwin writes. Like most other things in Wolfe's life, his beer drinking is bound by ritual. Seated at his desk, Wolfe presses the button twice to ring for beer, and Fritz delivers the bottles unopened; Wolfe uncaps the bottles himself, using an 18-karat gold bottle opener given to him by a satisfied client. He never drinks directly from

648-516: A day. Shad roe is a particular favorite, prepared in a number of different ways. Archie enjoys his food but lacks Wolfe's discerning palate, lamenting in The Final Deduction (chapter 9) that "Every spring I get so fed up with shad roe that I wish to heaven fish would figure out some other way. Whales have ." Shad roe is frequently the first course, followed by roasted or braised duck, another Wolfe favorite. Archie also complains that there

720-672: A fixed point in a turning world. In the course of the books, ten different street addresses are given on West 35th Street: "Curiously, the 900 block of West 35th Street would be in the Hudson River", wrote American writer Randy Cohen , who created a map of the literary stars' homes for The New York Times in 2005. "It's a non-address, the real estate equivalent of those 555 telephone numbers used in movies." Cohen settled on 922 West 35th Street—the address printed on Archie's business card in The Silent Speaker —as Nero Wolfe's address. On

792-452: A gong in Archie's room if someone approaches Wolfe's bedroom door or windows, and climate-controlled plant rooms on the top floor. Wolfe is a well-known amateur orchid grower and has 10,000 plants in the brownstone's greenhouse. He employs three live-in staff to see to his needs: Archie Goodwin (assistant), Fritz Brenner (chef), and Theodore Horstmann (orchidist). The front door is equipped with

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864-510: A hole in the ground. During the short story " Murder Is Corny ", he lectures Inspector Cramer on the right and wrong ways to cook corn on the cob, insisting that it must be roasted rather than boiled in order to achieve the best flavor. (The 1940 story " Bitter End " suggests the contrary view that Wolfe was unable to prepare his own meals; Fritz's illness with the flu causes a household crisis and forces Wolfe to resort to canned liver pâté for his lunch.) Wolfe's meals generally include an appetizer,

936-541: A little time in the kitchen myself." In The Doorbell Rang , he offers to cook Yorkshire Buck and, in " Immune to Murder ", the State Department asks him to prepare trout Montbarry for a visiting dignitary. In The Black Mountain , Wolfe and Goodwin stay briefly in an unoccupied house in Italy on their way to Montenegro; Wolfe prepares a pasta dish using Romano cheese that, from "his memory of local custom", he finds in

1008-434: A main course, a salad served after the entrée (with the salad dressing mixed at tableside and used immediately), and a dessert course with coffee. (After-dinner coffee, however, is often taken by Wolfe and Archie in the office rather than the dining room.) Many of the dishes referred to in the various Nero Wolfe stories and novels were collected and published, complete with recipes, as The Nero Wolfe Cookbook by Rex Stout and

1080-422: A memo prepared by Rex Stout in 1949, Nero Wolfe's age is 56, although this is not explicitly stated in the stories. "Those stories have ignored time for thirty-nine years," Stout told his authorized biographer, John McAleer. "Any reader who can't or won't do the same should skip them. I didn't age the characters because I didn't want to. That would have made it cumbersome and would seem to have centered attention on

1152-462: A more likely father for Wolfe. Commentators have noted a coincidence in the names "Sherlock Holmes" and "Nero Wolfe": The same vowels appear in the same order. In 1957, Ellery Queen called this "The great O-E theory" and suggested that it was derived from the father of mysteries, Edgar Allan Poe . The only mention of Wolfe's mother in Stout's stories is in the first novel, Fer-de-Lance (1935), in which it

1224-484: A pioneering political thriller, The President Vanishes (1934), before specializing in detective fiction. His 1934 novel Fer-de-Lance introduced his best-known characters, detective Nero Wolfe and his assistant Archie Goodwin , who were featured in 33 novels and 41 novellas and short stories between 1934 and 1975. In 1959, Stout received the Mystery Writers of America 's Grand Master Award. The Nero Wolfe corpus

1296-630: A private detective. I am a naturalized American citizen. Although the Nero Wolfe stories take place contemporaneously with their writing and depict a changing landscape and society, the principal characters in the corpus (the term used by Wolfe fandom for the collection of books and stories, as the Baker Street Irregulars refer to the Sherlock Holmes tales as "the Canon") do not age . According to

1368-465: A rifle in his hand. It was supposed by assistant Hunterdon County physician Dr. John Fuhrmann to be suicide. However, State Police Lieutenant J.J. Harris implied that foul play was a possibility. Found in Adamic's pocket by the police was a newspaper clipping of a story headlined "Adamic Red Spy, Woman Charges." Herbert Heisel, Hunterdon County Prosecutor, claimed that there was no reason to contradict

1440-553: A sheep in two days, different parts cooked in 20 different ways. The relapse also appears briefly in The League of Frightened Men (chapter 11), The Red Box (chapter 6), and Where There's a Will (chapter 12), but subsequently disappears from the corpus as a plot device—possibly because Archie eventually discovered how to shut down a relapse during its earliest stages, as chronicled in The Red Box . Wolfe views much of life through

1512-458: A thin strip of ebony to mark his place as he re-reads Seven Pillars of Wisdom . Archie indicates in various stories that Wolfe prefers to finish a paragraph before acknowledging an interruption in his reading. He often dog-ears a page to mark his place. William S. Baring-Gould 's summary of Wolfe's library was incorporated with contributions from others into an annotated reading list created by Winnifred Louis. Wolfe had once remarked to me that

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1584-453: Is a small hole in the office wall covered by what Archie calls a "trick picture of a waterfall". A person in an alcove at the end of the hallway can open a sliding panel covering the hole, so as to see and hear conversations and other events in the office without being noticed. The chair behind Wolfe's desk is custom-built, with special springs to hold his weight; according to Archie, it is the only chair that Wolfe really enjoys sitting in. Near

1656-488: Is modified to transmit sound to a speaker in the front room. The brownstone has a back entrance leading to a private garden, as noted in Champagne for One (chapter 10) and elsewhere, from which a passage leads to 34th Street—used to enter or leave Wolfe's home when it is necessary to evade surveillance. Archie says that Fritz tries to grow herbs such as chives in the garden. "That readers have proved endlessly fascinated with

1728-762: Is never corned beef or rye bread on Wolfe's table, and he sometimes ducks out to eat a corned beef sandwich at a nearby diner. Yet a young woman gives Wolfe a lesson in preparing corned beef hash in " Cordially Invited to Meet Death ". Another contradiction is found in Plot It Yourself when Archie goes to a diner to eat "fried chicken like my Aunt Margie used to make it back in Ohio", since Fritz does not fry chicken. But in The Golden Spiders , Fritz prepares fried chicken for Wolfe, Archie, Saul, Orrie, and Fred. Wolfe displays an oenophile 's knowledge of wine and brandy, but it

1800-420: Is on the third. Each of these floors also includes one spare bedroom, used on occasion to house a variety of clients, witnesses, and sometimes even culprits. Wolfe takes pride in being able to offer such assistance and once remarked, "The guest is a jewel resting on the cushion of hospitality". Wolfe's office becomes nearly soundproof when the doors connecting it to the front room and the hallway are closed. There

1872-482: Is only implied that he drinks either. In And Be a Villain (chapter 17), he issues a dinner invitation and regrets doing so on short notice: "There will not be time to chambrer a claret properly, but we can have the chill off." Continuing the invitation, Wolfe says of a certain brandy, "I hope this won't shock you, but the way to do it is to sip it with bites of Fritz's apple pie." On weekdays, Fritz serves Wolfe his breakfast in his bedroom. Archie eats his separately in

1944-775: Is said to have inspired the characterization of Wolfe. Other than Adee, Rex Stout's maternal grandmother, Emily Todhunter, who was obese requiring a special chair and was addicted to atlases, dictionaries & flowers and also an omnivorous reader, served as a model. For Archie, Chief A.G Goodwin, an officer who recovered Rex Stout's stolen record collection, served as a model. In 1956, J. D. Clark theorized in an article in The Baker Street Journal that Sherlock Holmes and Irene Adler (a character from " A Scandal in Bohemia ") had an affair in Montenegro in 1892, and that Nero Wolfe

2016-637: Is stated that she lives in Budapest and Wolfe sends her a monthly check. Some Wold Newton theorists have suggested the French thief Arsène Lupin as the father of Nero Wolfe. They note that in one story Lupin has an affair with the queen of a Balkan principality, which may be Montenegro by another name. Further, they note that the name Lupin resembles the French word for wolf, loup . I rarely leave my house. I do like it here. I would be an idiot to leave this chair, made to fit me — Wolfe has expensive tastes, living in

2088-411: Is subject to what he terms a "relapse"—a period of several days during which Wolfe refuses to work or even to listen to Archie badger him about work. The cause is unknown. Wolfe either takes to bed and eats nothing but bread and onion soup, or else he consults with Fritz on menus and the preparation of nonstop meals. In Fer-de-Lance (chapter 6), Archie reports that, during a relapse, Wolfe once ate half

2160-694: The American Expeditionary Forces , and after a time in Europe and North Africa, he came to the United States. According to John J. McAleer, Rex Stout's official biographer, during his stint in the Navy, Stout came into contact with Alvey A. Adee , who was a major influence on Stout's creation of Nero Wolfe. Adee was a scholar, sleuth, gourmet, bachelor, a model of efficiency, a master of the English language, and

2232-529: The Soviet Bloc . Anton Smole, of Tanjug , alleged that Adamic had told of him of multiple occasions in which unknown men had threatened Adamic over his public sympathies as a writer for Titoism and the anti-Stalinist Left . Included in these claims is a reported visit to Adamic's farmhouse in October of 1949 from an unknown man who warned him to stop submitting magazine articles that were friendly to Yugoslavia. Reportedly, Adamic had also been beaten severely on

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2304-837: The Writers' War Board during World War II, became a radio celebrity through his numerous broadcasts, and was later active in promoting World Federalism . He was the longtime president of the Authors Guild and served a term as president of the Mystery Writers of America. Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe books (novels and collections of novellas and short stories) are listed in order of publication. For specific publication history, including original magazine appearances, see entries for individual titles. Years link to year-in-literature articles. Louis Adamic Louis Adamic ( Slovene : Alojzij Adamič ; March 23, 1898  – September 4, 1951)

2376-535: The "Literary Map of Manhattan", the brownstone is numbered 58 and is placed in the middle of the Hudson River. It is described in the opening chapter of The Second Confession as being on West Thirty-Fifth Street "nearly to 11th Avenue", which would put it in the 500 block. Writing as Archie Goodwin, Ken Darby suggests that "the actual location was on East 22nd Street in the Gramercy Park District. ... Wolfe merely moved us, fictionally, from one place to

2448-407: The 1910s, writing more than 40 stories that appeared primarily in pulp magazines between 1912 and 1918. He then wrote no fiction for more than a decade, until the late 1920s, when he had saved enough money through his business activities to write when and what he pleased. In 1929, he wrote his first published book, How Like a God , an unusual psychological story written in the second person. He wrote

2520-507: The Century. I suggest beginning with autobiographical sketches from each of us, and here is mine. I was born in Montenegro and spent my early boyhood there. At the age of sixteen I decided to move around, and in fourteen years I became acquainted with most of Europe, a little of Africa, and much of Asia, in a variety of roles and activities. Coming to this country in nineteen-thirty, not penniless, I bought this house and entered into practice as

2592-507: The Editors of the Viking Press, published in 1973. All recipes are prefaced with a brief excerpt from the book or story that made reference to that particular dish. [Fritz] served Wolfe's beer first, the bottle unopened because that's a rule, and Wolfe got his opener from the drawer, a gold one Marko Vukcic had given him that didn't work very well. Nero Wolfe's first recorded words are, "Where's

2664-600: The Jungle : The Autobiography of an Immigrant in America (1932); The Native's Return: An American Immigrant Visits Yugoslavia and Discovers His Old Country (1934); Grandsons: A Story of American Lives (1935, novel); Cradle of Life: The Story of One Man's Beginnings (1936, novel); The House in Antigua (1937, travel); My America (1938); From Many Lands (1940); Two-Way Passage (1941); What's Your Name? (1942); My Native Land (1943); Nation of Nations (1945); and The Eagle and

2736-586: The Roots (1950). Maxim Lieber was his literary agent, 1930–1931 and in 1946. In 1941, Adamic won the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award for From Many Lands . Adamic was strongly opposed to the foreign policy followed by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill , and in 1946 wrote Dinner at the White House , which purported to be an account of a dinner party given by President Franklin D. Roosevelt at which Adamic and Churchill had both been present. After

2808-678: The White House in the British Library is held in the Suppressed Safe collection, inaccessible to readers. His support for the Tito regime led to him being targeted by Nevada Senator Pat McCarran , who between May and September 1949, chaired a subcommittee to expose Soviet sympathizers among ethnic communities. In 1951, he was found shot in his home in the Riegelsville section of Pohatcong Township, New Jersey , with his house burning and with

2880-421: The authorities. In 1957, Howard L. Yowell, the then-current owner of the house where Adamic died, found $ 12,350 cash in a tin box within a wall of the farmhouse. The Flemington Police speculated that the money had belonged to Adamic. According to John McAleer's Edgar Award -winning Rex Stout: A Biography (1977), it was the influence of Adamic that led Rex Stout to make his fictional detective Nero Wolfe

2952-439: The beer?" The first novel, Fer-de-Lance , introduces Wolfe as he prepares to change his habits. With Prohibition at an end, he can stop buying kegs of bootleg beer and purchase it legally in bottles. Fritz brings in samples of 49 different brands for him to evaluate, from which he ultimately selects Remmers as his favorite. Several times during the story, Wolfe announces his intention to reduce his beer intake from six quarts

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3024-462: The book when it was published, and a copy was circulated to every British Member of Parliament; when Churchill was alerted, he instructed his solicitors to issue a writ for libel . Harper and Brothers admitted the statement was untrue and Adamic also withdrew the claim and apologised; a substantial sum of damages was paid, reported by the Daily Express as £5,000. As of 2011 the copy of Dinner at

3096-410: The bottle, but instead pours the beer into a glass and lets the foam settle to an appropriate level before drinking. He keeps the gold opener in the center drawer of his desk, where he also keeps the bottlecaps as a means of tracking his daily/weekly consumption. In Plot It Yourself (chapter 13), Wolfe makes an unprecedented vow after Archie tells him the killer they seek has killed again. Wolfe hits

3168-550: The brownstone but the United States to avenge the murder of his oldest friend. He abandons his cherished daily habits for a time and, despite his physical bulk, engages in strenuous outdoor activity in mountain terrain. You, gentlemen, are Americans, much more completely than I am, for I wasn't born here. This is your native country. It was you and your brothers, black and white, who let me come here and live, and I hope you'll let me say, without getting maudlin, that I'm grateful to you for it. The corpus implies or states that Nero Wolfe

3240-406: The characters rather than the stories." According to the same memo, Wolfe's height is 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m) and his weight is 272 lb (123 kg). Archie Goodwin, the narrator of the stories, frequently describes Wolfe as weighing "a seventh of a ton". This was intended to indicate unusual obesity at the time of the first book (1934), especially through the use of the word "ton" as

3312-478: The controlled economy of the house and to discover there the source of disorder in their own lives. The invitation is extended to readers as well as to clients. Wolfe's most remarkable departure from the brownstone is for personal reasons, not for business, and thus does not violate the rule regarding the conduct of business away from the office. That event occurs in The Black Mountain , when he leaves not only

3384-452: The desk is a large chair upholstered in red leather, which is usually reserved for Inspector Cramer, a current or prospective client, or the person whom Wolfe and Archie want to question. In the short story " The Squirt and the Monkey ", Wolfe and Archie have a hidden tape recorder and microphone installed in the office, with controls in the kitchen. In the story " Eeny Meeny Murder Mo ", the system

3456-413: The desk with his fist, bellows in a language Archie does not understand, then coldly orders Fritz away when he enters with the beer: "Take it back. I shall drink no beer until I get my fingers around that creature's throat. And I shall eat no meat." Wolfe was drinking beer and looking at pictures of snowflakes in a book someone had sent him from Czechoslovakia. ... Looking at him, I said to myself, "He's in

3528-429: The dining room, on the opposite side of the first-floor hallway from the front room and the office. However, Archie will eat separately in the kitchen if he is in a rush due to pressing business or a social engagement, because Wolfe cannot bear to see a meal rushed. Wolfe also has a rule against discussing business at the table, sometimes bent but very rarely overtly broken. In the earliest books, Archie reports that Wolfe

3600-526: The establishment of a socialist Yugoslav federation . He founded the United Committee of South-Slavic Americans in support of Marshal Tito . From 1949 he was a corresponding member of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts . From 1940 onwards he served as editor of the magazine Common Ground . Adamic was the author of Dynamite: The Story of Class Violence in America (1931); Laughing in

3672-483: The first paragraph of Plot It Yourself , Archie relates his own method of grading what Wolfe is reading, on a scale from A to D. If Wolfe picks up a book before he rings for beer, and if he has marked his place with a thin strip of gold given to him by a grateful client, the book is an A. "I haven't kept score, but I would say that of the two hundred or so books he reads in a year not more than five or six get an A," Archie writes. In The Red Box (chapter 12), Wolfe uses

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3744-459: The idea of making Wolfe a Montenegrin from Louis Adamic ," Stout said, noting that everything he knew about Montenegrins he learned from Adamic's book, The Native's Return (1934), or from Adamic himself. Wolfe is reticent about his youth, but apparently he was athletic, fit, and adventurous. Before World War I , he spied for the Austrian government 's Evidenzbureau , but had a change of heart when

3816-505: The initial report of a suicide after further investigative and laboratory reports. John Roy Carlson , present at the burial of Adamic, said he believed Adamic was murdered by the Soviet Government, who were threatened by the impending publication of The Eagle and the Roots . Other unnamed friends of Adamic were reported to have said that he had been threatened due to his support for Marshal Tito following Yugoslavia's recent exit from

3888-431: The kitchen, although Wolfe might ask Fritz to send Archie upstairs if he has morning instructions for him. Regularly scheduled mealtimes for lunch and dinner are part of Wolfe's daily routine. In an early story, Wolfe tells a guest that luncheon is served daily at 1 p.m. and dinner at 8 p.m., although later stories suggest that lunchtime may have been changed to 1:15 or 1:30, at least on Fridays. Lunch and dinner are served in

3960-451: The model specially constructed on the Toronto set where most of the series was filmed—for example, the correct number of steps leading up to the stoop. It was, therefore, shown from angles that would camouflage any slight discrepancies. The series settled on "914" for the brownstone's address. This number can be seen on the studio set representing the front door exterior in several episodes and on

4032-472: The occasional exception of Rusterman's, owned for a time by Wolfe's best friend Marko Vukčić and later subject to Wolfe's trusteeship). In The Red Box (chapter 11), Wolfe states, "I know nothing of restaurants; short of compulsion, I would not eat in one were Vatel himself the chef." Wolfe appears to know his way around the kitchen; in Too Many Cooks (chapter 17), he tells Jerome Berin, "I spend quite

4104-459: The orchids were his concubines: insipid, expensive, parasitic and temperamental. He brought them, in their diverse forms and colors, to the limits of their perfection, and then gave them away; he had never sold one. Rex Stout bibliography#Nero Wolfe corpus This is a bibliography of fiction by and works about Rex Stout (December 1, 1886 – October 27, 1975), an American writer noted for his detective fiction. He began his literary career in

4176-557: The other in order to preserve his particular brand of privacy. As far as I can discover, there never were brownstone houses on West 35th Street." The absence of brownstones in Wolfe's neighborhood sent television producers to the Upper West Side of Manhattan for an appropriate home and setting for select exterior shots, used in the A&;E TV series Nero Wolfe . This Manhattan brownstone lacked some peculiarities of Wolfe's home, unlike

4248-459: The other principals distribute themselves in the yellow chairs, and Wolfe presides from his custom-made throne. For forty years, Inspector Cramer and Sergeant Purley Stebbins ring the doorbell, enter the office, and explode with indignation at Wolfe's intractability. The front room, the elevator, the three-foot globe—all persist in place through forty years of American history. ... Like Holmes's 221B Baker Street, Wolfe's West Thirty-Fifth Street remains

4320-459: The point: under no circumstances will he leave his home or violate his routines in order to facilitate an investigation. The exceptions are few and remarkable. Instead of spreading the principles of order and justice throughout his society, Wolfe imposes them dogmatically and absolutely within the walls of his house—the brownstone on West Thirty-Fifth Street—and he invites those who are troubled by an incomprehensible and threatening environment to enter

4392-492: The prism of food and dining, going so far as to say that Voltaire "... wasn't a man at all, since he had no palate and a dried-up stomach." He knows enough about fine cuisine to lecture on American cooking to Les Quinze Maîtres (a group of the 15 finest chefs in the world) in Too Many Cooks and to dine with the Ten for Aristology (a group of epicures) in " Poison à la Carte ". Wolfe does not, however, enjoy visiting restaurants (with

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4464-538: The proofs had been passed by publishers Harper and Brothers , an additional footnote was inserted in pages 151 and 152 which claimed that Churchill had opposed the National Liberation Front in Greece because they intended to scale down the rate of interest Greece was paying to Hambros Bank . The footnote further claimed that Hambros had "bailed Winston Churchill out of bankruptcy in 1912". The footnote appeared in

4536-465: The topography of Wolfe's brownstone temple should not be surprising", wrote J. Kenneth Van Dover in At Wolfe's Door : It is the center from which moral order emanates, and the details of its layout and its operations are signs of its stability. For forty years, Wolfe prepares menus with Fritz and pots orchids with Theodore. For forty years, Archie takes notes at his desk, the client sits in the red chair and

4608-408: The unit of measure. In a single short story written in 1947, Archie writes, "He weighs between 310 and 390, and he limits his physical movements to what he regards as the irreducible essentials." "Wolfe's most extravagant distinction is his extreme antipathy to literal extravagance. He will not move," wrote J. Kenneth Van Dover in At Wolfe's Door: The Nero Wolfe Novels of Rex Stout : He insists upon

4680-535: The war began. He then joined the Serbian-Montenegrin army and fought against the Austrians and Germans . That means that he was likely to have been involved in the harrowing 1915 withdrawal of the defeated Serbian army, when thousands of soldiers died from disease, starvation, and sheer exhaustion – which might help to explain the comfort-loving habits that are such a conspicuous part of Wolfe's character. He joined

4752-524: Was a Slovene-American author and translator, mostly known for writing about and advocating for ethnic diversity of the United States. Louis Adamic was born at Praproče Mansion in Praproče pri Grosupljem in the region of Lower Carniola , in what is now Slovenia (then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire ). He was baptized Alojzij Adamič . The oldest son of the peasants Anton and Ana Adamič, he

4824-700: Was a bestseller directed against King Alexander's regime in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia . This book gave many Americans their first real knowledge of the Balkans . In it, Adamic predicted that America would prosper by eventually "going left", i.e. adopting socialism. He received the Guggenheim Fellowship award in 1932. During the Second World War he had supported the Yugoslav National liberation struggle and

4896-584: Was admitted to the Jesuit school in Ljubljana, but was unable to bring himself to go. "No more school for me. I was going to America," Adamic wrote. "I did not know how, but I knew that I would go." On December 31, 1913, at the age of 15, Adamic emigrated to the United States. He finally settled in a heavily ethnic Croatian fishing community of San Pedro, California . He became a naturalized United States citizen in 1918 as Louis Adamic. Adamic first worked as

4968-620: Was born in Montenegro , with one exception: In the first chapter of Over My Dead Body (1939), Wolfe tells an FBI agent that he was born in the United States – a declaration at odds with all other references. Stout revealed the reason for the discrepancy in a 1940 letter cited by his authorized biographer, John McAleer: "In the original draft of Over My Dead Body Nero was a Montenegrin by birth, and it all fitted previous hints as to his background; but violent protests from The American Magazine , supported by Farrar & Rinehart, caused his cradle to be transported five thousand miles." "I got

5040-660: Was given a limited childhood education at the city school and, in 1909, entered the primary school at Ljubljana . Early in his third year he joined a secret students' political club associated with the Yugoslav Nationalistic Movement that had recently sprung up in the South-Slavic provinces of Austria-Hungary . Swept up in a bloody demonstration in November 1913, Adamic was briefly jailed, expelled from school, and barred from any government educational institution. He

5112-533: Was nominated as Best Mystery Series of the Century at Bouchercon XXXI , the world's largest mystery convention, and Rex Stout was nominated as Best Mystery Writer of the Century. In addition to writing fiction, Stout was a prominent public intellectual for decades. He was active in the early years of the American Civil Liberties Union and a founder of the Vanguard Press . Stout served as head of

5184-486: Was the result. The idea was later co-opted by W. S. Baring-Gould and implied in the novels of Nicholas Meyer and John Lescroart , but there is no evidence that Rex Stout had any such connection in mind. Certainly there is no mention of it in any of the stories, although a painting of Sherlock Holmes does hang over Archie Goodwin's desk in Nero Wolfe's office. Some commentators note both physical and psychological resemblances and suggest Sherlock's brother Mycroft Holmes as

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