The Doorbell Rang (Nero Wolfe #41) (Mass Market)
$8.99
Out of Stock - Not Available
Out of Stock - Not Available
Other Books in Series
This is book number 41 in the Nero Wolfe series.
- #1: Fer-de-Lance (Nero Wolfe #1) (Mass Market): $8.99
- #2: The League of Frightened Men (Nero Wolfe #2) (Paperback): $17.00
- #3: The Rubber Band (Nero Wolfe #3) (Paperback): $17.00
- #5: Too Many Cooks (Nero Wolfe #5) (Paperback): $17.00
- #6: Some Buried Caesar (Nero Wolfe #6) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #7: Over My Dead Body (Nero Wolfe #7) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #8: Where There's a Will (Nero Wolfe #8) (Paperback): $17.00
- #9: Black Orchids (Nero Wolfe #9) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #10: Not Quite Dead Enough (Nero Wolfe #10) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #11: The Silent Speaker (Nero Wolfe #11) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #13: And Be a Villain (Nero Wolfe #13) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #14: Trouble in Triplicate (Nero Wolfe #14) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #15: The Second Confession (Nero Wolfe #15) (Mass Market): $8.99
- #16: Three Doors to Death (Nero Wolfe #16) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #17: In the Best Families (Nero Wolfe #17) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #18: Curtains for Three (Nero Wolfe #18) (Paperback): $17.00
- #19: Murder by the Book (Nero Wolfe #19) (Paperback): $17.00
- #20: Triple Jeopardy (Nero Wolfe #20) (Paperback): $17.00
- #21: Prisoner's Base (Nero Wolfe #21) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #22: The Golden Spiders (Nero Wolfe #22) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #25: Before Midnight (Nero Wolfe #25) (Paperback): $17.00
- #26: Three Witnesses (Nero Wolfe #26) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #27: Might as Well Be Dead (Nero Wolfe #27) (Paperback): $15.00
- #28: Three for the Chair (Nero Wolfe #28) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #29: If Death Ever Slept (Nero Wolfe #29) (Paperback): $15.00
- #30: And Four to Go (Nero Wolfe #30) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #31: Champagne for One (Nero Wolfe #31) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #33: Three at Wolfe's Door (Nero Wolfe #33) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #35: The Final Deduction (Nero Wolfe #35) (Paperback): $17.00
- #36: Homicide Trinity (Nero Wolfe #36) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #38: The Mother Hunt (Nero Wolfe #38) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #39: Trio for Blunt Instruments (Nero Wolfe #39) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #40: A Right to Die (Nero Wolfe #40) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #42: Death of a Doxy (Nero Wolfe #42) (Mass Market): $7.99
- #43: The Father Hunt (Nero Wolfe #43) (Paperback): $16.00
- #44: Death of a Dude (Nero Wolfe #44) (Paperback): $17.00
- #45: Please Pass the Guilt (Nero Wolfe #45) (Paperback): $15.00
- #47: Death Times Three (Nero Wolfe #47) (Paperback): $17.00
Description
There’s no one and nothing the great detective Nero Wolfe wouldn’t take on if the price was right. That’s something wealthy society widow Rachel Bruner is counting on when she writes him a check for a whopping hundred grand. But even Wolfe has a moment’s doubt when he finds out why the prize is so generous. For the oversize genius and his able assistant Archie Goodwin are about to lock horns with the FBI—and those highly trained G-men have a way with threats, tails, and bugs that could give even sedentary sleuth Nero Wolfe a run for his money.
Introduction by Stuart Kaminsky
“It is always a treat to read a Nero Wolfe mystery. The man has entered our folklore.”—The New York Times Book Review
A grand master of the form, Rex Stout is one of America’s greatest mystery writers, and his literary creation Nero Wolfe is one of the greatest fictional detectives of all time. Together, Stout and Wolfe have entertained—and puzzled—millions of mystery fans around the world. Now, with his perambulatory man-about-town, Archie Goodwin, the arrogant, gourmandizing, sedentary sleuth is back in the original seventy-three cases of crime and detection written by the inimitable master himself, Rex Stout.
About the Author
Rex Stout (1886–1975) wrote dozens of short stories, novellas, and full-length mystery novels, most featuring his two indelible characters, the peerless detective Nero Wolfe and his handy sidekick, Archie Goodwin.
Praise For…
“It is always a treat to read a Nero Wolfe mystery. The man has entered our folklore.”—The New York Times Book Review