The Room with the Tassels by Carolyn Wells
Carolyn Wells was a powerhouse in the early 1900s mystery scene, and The Room with the Tassels shows exactly why. It's a classic country house whodunit, wrapped in a ghost story, and it's a total page-turner.
The Story
The plot kicks off with that classic setup: a group of people gather at a remote, eerie mansion for a party. The owner, Gifford Bruce, is a bit of a show-off and decides the main entertainment will be a sleepover in the house's famously haunted room—the one with the distinctive tasseled draperies. The guests are a mix of skeptics and the easily spooked. After a night filled with strange noises and creepy feelings, one of them is found dead. The local doctor calls it natural causes, but the whispers about the 'Aspens Ghost' are everywhere.
Enter Pennington Wise, a detective who relies on psychology and careful observation, and his fantastic assistant, Zizi. She's sharp, artistic, and notices all the little details everyone else misses. Together, they sift through the secrets and tensions among the guests. Was it a ghost? Or was it someone in the house with a very real motive?
Why You Should Read It
What I love about this book is its atmosphere. Wells builds the suspense slowly, making you feel the chill of the old halls and the weight of the mansion's dark history right alongside the characters. It's not a bloody thriller; it's a mental puzzle. Pennington Wise is a fun detective to follow—think of a less eccentric Sherlock Holmes—but for me, Zizi steals the show. For a book written in 1918, having a young woman be the intuitive, clue-spotting brains of the operation feels refreshingly modern.
The mystery itself is clever. Wells plays fair with the reader, dropping hints and red herrings in equal measure. Trying to piece it all together before Wise reveals the solution is half the fun.
Final Verdict
This book is perfect for anyone who loves the golden age of detective fiction. If you're a fan of Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None or the atmospheric puzzles of John Dickson Carr, you'll feel right at home. It's also a great pick for a rainy afternoon or a Halloween read—spooky but not scary. While some of the language is of its time, the core mystery is timeless. The Room with the Tassels is a charming, clever, and thoroughly entertaining escape into a world of ghosts, secrets, and very human deception.
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John Moore
1 month agoI have to admit, the content flows smoothly from one chapter to the next. Highly recommended.
Richard Thompson
9 months agoHonestly, the author's voice is distinct and makes complex topics easy to digest. Don't hesitate to start reading.