The League of Frightened Men

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The League of
Frightened Men
Author Rex Stout
Country United States
Language English
Series Nero Wolfe
Genre(s) Detective fiction
Publisher Farrar & Rinehart
Publication date August 14, 1935
Media type Print (Hardcover)
Pages 308 pp. (first edition)
ISBN NA
Preceded by Fer-de-Lance
Followed by The Rubber Band

The League of Frightened Men is the second Nero Wolfe detective novel by Rex Stout. The story was serialized in six issues of The Saturday Evening Post (June 15–July 20, 1935) under the title The Frightened Men. The novel was published in 1935 by Farrar & Rinehart, Inc.

Contents

[edit] Plot introduction

An author, Paul Chapin, is on trial for alleged obscenity in his popular novel, and Archie is telling Wolfe the scurrilous details as found in the newspaper. Wolfe and Archie have an argument about obscenity law, and its upshot is that Wolfe tells Archie to have the book sent over in the morning.

Wolfe reads the book, then tells Archie that Andrew Hibbard, a potential client, had visited while Archie was away on another case, and that the Hibbard had asked Wolfe to arrange to protect him from a man whose name he would not disclose. However, Hibbard did include other particulars,

  1. many years earlier, a "boyish prank" upon his friend (now nemesis) had had a lasting and tragic outcome
  2. in Hibbard's opinion the man was a psychopath
  3. following the deaths of two their mutual friends at gatherings (reunions), they had received lengthy typewritten unsigned masterfully word poems/threats each saying, among other things that "he had embarked on a ship of vengeance"
  4. the man had had recent commercial success


At the time, Wolfe sent Hibbard away with two recommendations

  1. Get some life insurance
  2. Find another agency specializing in personal protection

Now, after reading the Chapin cited in the court case, Wolfe has found the curious phrase "embark on a ship of vengeance" twice in that novel, and from that and other considerations forms the surmise that Paul Chapin was man Andrew Hibbard feared but would not name.

Wolfe considers his surmise to have been validated by confirmation that Chapin had been crippled in a hazing accident at a Harvard dorm many years before, and also by knowledge that Chapin has a new successful play on Broadway.

Hibbard has been missing for a week or two -- but Wolfe locates some the other members of the "League of Atonement" through Hibbard's niece -- and as already told by Hibbard in the first attempt to engage Wolfe, some of the League have begun dying, though from the actions of Paul Chapin, other menaces, or simply the ordinary course of life is not yet known.

Therefore surviving members of the League enter into an agreement with Wolfe that he should provide the League removal of threats and apprehensions from the following sources

  • Paul Chapin
  • Person, possibly Chapin, who has sent typewritten poetic taunts/threats members of the League have recently received (and caused the League of Atonement set up after the hazing accident to be recently dubbed The League of Frightened Men)
  • Person or persons responsible for the recent deaths of two of their number (and possibly Hibbard as well, as noted earlier)

The effectiveness of Wolfe's work is to be decided by a majority vote of the League members.

[edit] The unfamiliar word

In most Nero Wolfe novels and novellas, there is at least one unfamiliar word, usually spoken by Wolfe.

  • Viva voce, chapter 2. Wolfe refers Archie to a conversation in the office that was transcribed by a stenographer hired while Archie was away:
I nodded, glancing over the typewritten pages. "Andrew Hibbard. Instructor in psychology at Columbia. It was on October twentieth, a Saturday, that’s two weeks ago today."
"Suppose you read it."
"Viva voce?"
"Archie." Wolfe looked at me. "Where did you pick that up, where did you learn to pronounce it, and what do you think it means?"
"Do you want me to read this stuff out loud, sir?"
"It doesn't mean out loud. Confound you." Wolfe emptied his glass, leaned back in his chair, got his fingers to meet in front of his belly, and laced them. "Proceed."

[edit] Reviews and commentary

  • Jacques Barzun and Wendell Hertig Taylor, A Catalogue of Crime — Archie gets some rough handling and even cries in this longish and complicated story of threatened and actual violence embracing two and a half dozen men of various occupations and characters, who in the past have injured a youth whose revenge they now fear.[1]
  • Clifton Fadiman, The New Yorker — The second book about Nero Wolfe, newest of eccentric detectives, and good enough to prove that his success isn't just a fluke. An excellent story about thirty men scared to death by a cripple, told out of the side of the mouth.[2]

The prominent American man of letters Edmund Wilson wrote in a review in The New Yorker that the book "makes use of a clever psychological idea."

[edit] Adaptations

[edit] The League of Frightened Men

Columbia Pictures adapted the novel for its 1937 film The League of Frightened Men. Lionel Stander reprised his Meet Nero Wolfe role as Archie Goodwin, and Walter Connolly starred as Nero Wolfe.

[edit] External links

The unfamiliar word

[edit] Publication history

Rico Tomaso illustrated the six-part serialized printing of The Frightened Men for The Saturday Evening Post (June 15–July 20, 1935)
Rico Tomaso illustrated the six-part serialized printing of The Frightened Men for The Saturday Evening Post (June 15–July 20, 1935)
  • 1935, The Saturday Evening Post, June 15–July 20, 1935, as The Frightened Men
  • 1935, New York: Farrar and Rinehart, August 14, 1935, hardcover
  • 1935, Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1935, hardcover
  • 1935, London: Cassell, 1935, hardcover
  • 1937, New York: Grosset and Dunlap, 1937, hardcover
  • 1940, New York: Triangle, January 1940, hardcover
  • 1942, New York: Avon, 1942, paperback
  • 1944, Cleveland, Ohio: The Nero Wolfe Omnibus (with The Red Box), January 1944, hardcover
  • New York: Jonathan Press Mystery #J-33, not dated, abridged, paperback
  • New York: Mercury Mystery #48, not dated, abridged, paperback
  • 1955, New York: Viking, Full House (with And Be a Villain and Curtains for Three), May 15, 1955, hardcover
  • 1961, London: Penguin, 1961, paperback
  • 1963, New York: Pyramid (Green Door), October 1963, paperback
  • 1979, New York: Jove, June 1979, paperback
  • 1995, New York: Bantam ISBN 0553762982 January 1995, paperback
  • 1996, Burlington, Ontario: Durkin Hayes Publishing, DH Audio ISBN 0886464188 September 1996, audio cassette (read by Saul Rubinek)
  • 2004, Newport Beach, California: The Audio Partners Publishing Corp., Mystery Masters ISBN 1572704047 July 2004, audio CD (unabridged, read by Michael Prichard)
  • 2008, New York: Bantam Dell Publishing Group (with Fer-de-Lance) ISBN 0553385453 June 2008, paperback

[edit] References

  1. ^ 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
  2. ^ The New Yorker, August 17, 1935, p. 60


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