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The writer and professional controversialist Gustav Slavorigin is murdered in the small Swiss town of Meiringen during its annual Sherlock Holmes Festival, his body discovered with an arrow through the heart. With a price of ten million dollars on Slavorigin's head, almost none of the Festival's guests can be regarded as above suspicion. Except Evadne Mount, of course, the stubborn amateur sleuth and bestselling crime novelist from Gilbert Adair's The Act of Roger Murgatroyd and A Mysterious Affair of Style. Neither of those two cases, however, prepared her for the jaw-dropping twists of this new investigation, which climaxes at Meiringen's principal tourist attraction, the Reichenbach Falls - the site of Holmes's fatal confrontation with his nemesis, Moriarty . . .
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I enjoyed And Then There was No One.
I wasn't entirely convinced at first - Adair came across as pompous and overly wordy, but that's all part of the joke.
There's some really smart metafictional elements in here, as well as some great parody. It got a genuine chuckle out of me now and then.
That being said, the humour is a little too on the nose. A fun read, and I'll definitely check out Adair's Agatha Christie pastiches.