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The Adventure of the Emperor's Dice by Ellery Queen  

Classic Detective Stories
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Another classic detective story!
Guest Narrator: Michael Rutland, Austin, Tx.
Michael Rutland was a professional journalist and photographer. After writing cover stories for Boys' Life and Scouting Magazines, he taught literature and creative writing in China for nearly a decade. Following that he earned a master's degree from Harvard, and now dedicates his time to teaching and his writing. He lives in Austin, Texas with his wife and three daughters. He can be reached at: oldsoulexplorer@gmail.com.
Ellery Queen is a pseudonym created in 1928 by the American detective fiction writers Frederic Dannay and Manfred Bennington Lee. It is also the name of their main fictional detective, a mystery writer in New York City who helps his police inspector father solve baffling murder cases. From 1929 to 1971, Dannay and Lee wrote around forty novels and short story collections featuring Ellery Queen as a character.
"The Adventure of the Emperor's Dice" was originally written as a script for the Ellery Queen radio drama series and aired on March 31, 1940. It was then adapted into short story form by Frederic Dannay and Manfred B. Lee, the two cousins who wrote under the pseudonym Ellery Queen. The short story version was first published in the April 1951 issue of Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. It was included later that year as one of the stories in the anthology collection Calendar of Crime, published by Little, Brown and Company, as part of their year-long series of monthly murder mysteries. In both its radio play and short story iterations, "The Adventure of the Emperor's Dice" featured the character Ellery Queen, his father Inspector Richard Queen, and secretary Nikki Porter investigating a baffling murder case involving an inherited set of ancient dice.
In the late 1920s when Dannay and Lee first created the Ellery Queen character and stories, the detective fiction genre was still heavily influenced by the "Golden Age" embodied by writers like Agatha Christie and the clue-puzzle mysteries popularized in the 1920s. The Ellery Queen mysteries represented an American take on this tradition, with intricate plots and a focus on following clues and deductive reasoning.
However, by the 1940s when "The Emperor's Dice" first aired as a radio play, the genre was starting to evolve with the rise of hardboiled detective fiction spearheaded by writers like Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler. Their pioneering work injected more gritty realism into crime stories.
"The Emperor's Dice" straddled these two eras. While adhering to the classic clue-puzzle format the Queen stories were known for, it also incorporated more modern elements like an atmospheric opening scene, hints of psychologically damaged characters, and flashes of noir-esque descriptions.
When it was published in print form in 1951's Calendar of Crime anthology, detective fiction was further evolving with writers like John D. MacDonald blending elements of the traditional and hardboiled styles. "The Emperor's Dice" can be seen as an important transitional work that helped evolve the American detective novel from its golden age into a more modern psychological suspense style.
With its deft blending of puzzle-solving and mood, clever plotting and character insights, "The Emperor's Dice" exemplified how Dannay and Lee masterfully kept the Ellery Queen stories vital and distinctive even as the genre changed around them. It remains an influential and important work in the development of American mystery writing.
In the late 1920s when Dannay and Lee first created the Ellery Queen character and stories, the detective fiction genre was still heavily influenced by the "Golden Age" embodied by writers like Agatha Christie and the clue-puzzle mysteries popularized in the 1920s. The Ellery Queen mysteries represented an American take on this tradition, with intricate plots and a focus on following clues and deductive reasoning.
However, by the 1940s when "The Emperor's Dice" first aired as a radio play, the genre was starting to evolve with the rise of hardboiled detective fiction spearheaded by writers like Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler. Their pioneering work injected more gritty realism into crime stories.
"The Emperor's Dice" straddled these two eras. While adhering to the classic clue-puzzle format the Queen stories were known for, it also incorporated more modern elements like an atmospheric opening scene, hints of psychologically damaged characters, and flashes of noir-esque descriptions.
When it was published in print form in 1951's Calendar of Crime anthology, detective fiction was further evolving with writers like John D. MacDonald blending elements of the traditional and hardboiled styles. "The Emperor's Dice" can be seen as an important transitional work that helped evolve the American detective novel from its golden age into a more modern psychological suspense style.

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26 апр 2024

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Комментарии : 17   
@LucicPower
@LucicPower 2 месяца назад
Let the detecting begin!
@DaleRibbons
@DaleRibbons 2 дня назад
I have the Calendar Of Crime book. Loved all the stories in that volume. I enjoyed this even though I knew the outcome. I thought Michael Rutland did a good job playing Ellery.
@MaggieatPlay
@MaggieatPlay 2 месяца назад
Thank you, Michael! Thank you, Tony! Enjoyed the story and the narration; and the after-waffle.
@Renrose68
@Renrose68 2 месяца назад
I was listening to Ellery Queen's first novel earlier today. I was excited when this dropped. Great story! Great narration!
@peterbianchi6219
@peterbianchi6219 2 месяца назад
Thanks!
@classicdetective
@classicdetective Месяц назад
Thank you. Don't know how I missed this one. Thanks
@Story-Voracious66
@Story-Voracious66 2 месяца назад
Thanks Tony, thank you Michael, you put so much into this. But I can't get through it. I don't know if it's the story, or your style, or both but I've tried three times and can't grasp what's going on. I can't tell who is whom, and which ones are supposed to be hysterical. So sorry for a negative comment, it is meant to be conservative. The flow and pace just weren't there for me. But don't let my words discourage you. 😕
@evelanpatton
@evelanpatton 2 месяца назад
I have to completely agree. I’m back again for a third try now. It just feels “cut-up”. No seamlessness to the telling, so the information just comes off as pieced sentences cut together. Underwhelming & confusing. I come for Tony Walker level engagement & so the bar is high. Sadly, not many compare in narration but because they are Tony’s choice of work it feels like a loss I didn’t know I would have- again, expectations are extremely high. 😮😢💜🪭
@xlrrutland1295
@xlrrutland1295 2 месяца назад
Loved it
@judikingsman6132
@judikingsman6132 2 месяца назад
What very pretty dice 🎲🎲😍
@martiwilliams4592
@martiwilliams4592 2 месяца назад
"Banked gleefully". Really delightful tale, made even more delightful with the very expressive, creative narrative, with all the American dialects and voices. So much fun! I am so used to hearing Creative English spoken in a variety of Danish accents :0) Thanks so much for the entertaining storytelling and some much needed giggles.
@ritamartin4782
@ritamartin4782 2 месяца назад
Caligula was a demon 😈
@johnthomasriley2741
@johnthomasriley2741 2 месяца назад
Roman dice do not look like modern dice. They are more rectangular than cubic. The various combinations were named after gods. Throw a Venus.
@judikingsman6132
@judikingsman6132 Месяц назад
At least there are dice in the picture and not just a die‼️😜🤐🎲
@martiwilliams4592
@martiwilliams4592 2 месяца назад
"PS: Thank you, Tony for your "ramblings" -longing for a flat Earth... .
@classicdetective
@classicdetective 2 месяца назад
all the sea would run off if it was flat
@vanillasuncherries
@vanillasuncherries Месяц назад
We want your voice not these turkeys
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