The Mystery Girl
Gelesen von Roger Melin
Carolyn Wells
Was it murder or suicide? All entrances to the study where the body was found were locked from the inside. The future college president and groom-to-be had no known cause for suicide, yet no clues in either direction appeared to make any sense. Was Anita, the Mystery Girl, who had just arrived in the New England college town, somehow been implicated? Had she any reason to ensure of the demise of the well-liked man? Perhaps some love letters between the two that nobody was to know about? And what of the mark of a ring on the deceased man's forehead? The college town was abuzz, and it seemed everyone had their own ideas of what actually happened. - Summary by Roger Melin (8 hr 8 min)
Chapters
Bewertungen
GREAT ENDING
AVID READER
As so many have already stated, the reading was superb. And. to those who complain of the "unnecessary" length, let me say that I can always enjoy a tale, no matter the length, so long as there are two things: an evil, greedy, unscrupulous relative; and a couple of self-righteous. gossipy biddies who try to make life miserable for the heroine!
Excellent Reading
Jpassservais
As always Roger did a wonderful job of making a not so wonderful book enjoyable. I have never heard anything he read that I did not enjoy. I thought the book, however, was fairly predictable but it was a good one despite that. But God bless Roger for this and for all of the other great work he has done and given of his great gift for reading for the enjoyment of all of us...and thanks to Librivox.
Technically it’s fine, the recording is clean and professional, the reader is excellent. The story itself is pretty poor. The characters are shallow and inconsistent. There’s an ingenious plot twist but it’s clumsily executed. Almost as if the author took her time with most of the book, but was forced to suddenly wrap everything up and end it hurriedly.
Not great book by this author
norac
I'm very familiar with and tolerant of this era's mystery fiction. Many reviews talk about common factors - yes they're long, use lots of words, have a romance, a main suspect who won't defend himself, often use the "I can't tell you" trope, and use social issues that aren't scandalous to us. These things don't bother me. These books are "stuck in their time" and I enjoy them. This author is typically good. This book, though, seems to have been written to showcase men at their very worse at opposite ends of the spectrum. There are a few decent characters here, but many of the women are also awful. Lastly, the solution was obvious to me from near the beginning, so as a result, I grew impatient with the girl who is the only murder suspect tightly clinging to the "I can't tell you" trope for far too many chapters. What a numbskull. Fleming Stone is pointlessly called in at the end (for about a day) and misses it completely. The reader is fabulous!
ItsLoriK
The method used to kill John was a good one. The reason for his death, Anita being a jerk to many, the character of her mother, all the "love" at 1st sight and depth of love, not getting a divorce off the bat then pretending to have died, & the reason for the disappearance are some of the things that are silly & ridiculous in this book. I wish I could explain but you'll see. Also, the mystery of Anita's identity was never a mystery to me & I'm not one to figure out mysteries often. I don't regret listening to this. I just expected a great read based on the overblown reviews.
interesting- - unnecessarily long
Cindy Barnett
Interesting plot seems disconnected at times (elongated). Author isn't one of the best detective novelists but entertaining enough. Roger Melin narrates well as usual. My grandmother, raised in the era, would have thought her written opinions of women were barbaric.
excellent reader, odd story
darthlaurel
The author reinforces stereotypes about women writers as well as other stereotypes. That part is awkward in the extreme. Very contrived but also slightly clever and completely unbelievable. But the reader does his usual excellent job and I'm not complaining.
one of my favorite readers
Ms. Elizabeth
Gave this book another try. Still can't stand the girl, Anita, or the men that protected her. She should have just told the truth from the beginning, saving an honorable man's memory.