The Circular Staircase Audiobook By Mary Roberts Rinehart cover art

The Circular Staircase

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The Circular Staircase

By: Mary Roberts Rinehart
Narrated by: Lorna Raver
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About this listen

”This is the story of how a middle-aged spinster lost her mind, deserted her domestic gods in the city, took a furnished house for the summer out of town, and found herself involved in one of those mysterious crimes that keep our newspapers and detective agencies happy and prosperous.” So begins The Circular Staircase, a book which has been hailed as the best novel by the most important American woman mystery writer of our time.

Rachel Innes was relieved when Gertrude and Halsey arrived to keep their dear old aunt company and allow her the courtesy of a decent night’s sleep. Unfortunately, the explosive sound of a revolver shot the next night shattered Rachel’s hopes. And the body at the foot of the circular staircase ensured many sleepless nights to follow.

Public Domain (P)2011 Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Mystery Fiction Suspense Summer Classic Mystery
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What listeners say about The Circular Staircase

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

reader makes th book so funny

the reader is superb, she makes th story!!! and of course I always love this author's works.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

A period piece well performed, with caveat

Written in 1908 by one of the earliest women mystery writers about a woman who finds herself playing detective, it's a captivating story and the narrator captures what I imagine the voice of the heroine would have been. The story is well told, and the characters are interesting and well developed.

My caveat: Being from this era, unfortunately the author also embedded two or three racist references in her description of the African American servant and in repeating someone's thought "The only Indian is a dead Indian."

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

40 is the new 75 to this narrator- UGH!

What did you like best about The Circular Staircase? What did you like least?

Mary Roberts Rinehart is one of my favorite American writers of the light or 'cozy' mystery story, as well as a master of the sardonic style of journal-telling format.

Did the plot keep you on the edge of your seat? How?

I have read this book a few times; it is somewhat convoluted and maybe not MRR's best.

How could the performance have been better?

The Roberts Rinehart heroines deserve MUCH better! A narrator who is as familiar with MRR's style as many of her admirers and readers. Also, one who does not think a middle-aged woman has the vocality of a septua- or even octogenarian.

Was The Circular Staircase worth the listening time?

It should have been; however, I hope it will not be the first try by many readers of MRR's books.

Any additional comments?

I had been almost angry in the past at Flo Gibson's aging of MRR's middleaged characters- these are strong women, full of wit and sarcasm, daring, and even romance. Yet Flo gave the 80 year-old's quaver to every one of them. In the case of Tish, perhaps, this was acceptable--but not for ALL. Some of these women end up in a romance by story's end with the detective, investigator, etc., of the story--and, incidentally, these same-aged male characters are given a sound normal to a middle aged man. Therefore, I was pleased to see a new name for narration when I found MRR's offerings on Audible.com. Alas, this narrator apparently learned at the knee of Flo!

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5 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Enjoyed This One in Spite of Myself

In the teeth of an annoying narrator and dragging plot I persevered, curious to hear a mystery story from just before the Golden Age, by the woman dubbed “the American Agatha Christie”. I’m glad I did.

Before long, I realized Lorna Raver is true to her role: a maiden lady of regular habits and strong opinions. Whenever the plot began to sag, a further revelation deepened the mystery. Even the most sensational developments happen naturally. And humor, a key ingredient of the Golden Age, is here mixed dexterously with the mystery and suspense.

Granted, the ground rules of 1908 take some getting used to; the local electric company shuts off the juice at midnight; bank deposits are not federally insured, and a mere shard of broken china can shred a car’s tires. But the real stumbling blocks are a reader who labors unconvincingly in every role save that of spinster and a plot with so many moving parts that during the neat summation I encountered details I'd forgotten completely. Be all that as it may, I listened to the end, a tribute to an engaging if tangled yarn.

A note on covers: Some 18th and early 19th century novels feature mid-Victorian fashions, but this one is something special: a woman in modern dress ascending a staircase by no means circular with, behind her on a step, a percussion cap, muzzle loading horse pistol from the century before this story--which features a revolver--begins. Just sayin’.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Some racism.

Racism isn't unexpected in a novel published in 1908. It's just a shame it's still here in the 21st century. Otherwise, it's a funny spooky novel. A Halloween read.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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A classic mystery

Mary Roberts Rinehart is one of the classic mystery witers, along with Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers and Margery Allingham. this book is one of the ones that made her reputaton. It has all the classic elements: an isolated coutry house, noises in the night, an nkonwn person dead in a locked huse....

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Fun mystery with a great protagonist

I’m a sucker for a spinster sleuth, and we have a wonderful one here in Rachel Ennis. The story takes place in 1908. There are ghosts (or are there!), murders, faithful family retainers, dark secrets, and young love (which I could do without, but seems to almost be a requirement for mystery novels of 1900-1935). Overall, the narrator is excellent, although one of her female voices seems a bit stilted. It would be very difficult to create different voices for so many female characters, though, and she does so successfully, so that is just a nit.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

love these old books

Although the storyline is a little predictable the melodramatic story telling style really entertains me.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

I Hated This Book

Any additional comments?

This is an alright mystery story, but I could just not get past the portrayal of the black guy, and the language used to describe him. When reading old books I do try to understand that things used to be different, and I guess it didn't raise any eyebrows for the author to call one of her characters "that darky" or whatever, but it was too jarring for me, and I think it's because the narrator made those passages worse. There is also the simpering woman, who did nothing but cry and say "you will hate me". I thought this was a classic, but it annoyed me greatly. Oh well, the story itself is a bit interesting.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

An early influential Gothic mystery

Mary Roberts Rinehart is known as "the American Agatha Christie," though she published her first mystery 14 years before Christie's The Mysterious Affair at Seedless of1920. Probably Rinehart's most famous book is 1908's The Circular Staircase in which narrator Rachel Innes, the spinster guardian of her niece and nephew, Gertrude and Halsey, takes a lease on the house owned by the banker Paul Armstrong, to find herself involved in a curious mystery. The book, narrated by Rachel, is credited with inventing the "Had I But Known" style of mystery books in which the mystery takes much longer to solve because various characters keep facts to themselves and thus prolong the solution from coming to light.

The Circular Staircase begins when Rachel Innes leases a summer home in the country, Sunnyside, for herself, Halsey, and Gertrude, now 20 and 24 respectively. The first night, she and her lifelong maid, who is really her best friend, Liddy, are left alone in the house after all the servants desert them, and they hear noises of what Rachel considers to be an intruder and Liddy considers to be a ghost. With morning light, things seem better, and Halsey and Gertrude arrive, along with a man named Jack Bailey, whom Halsey assures her she will soon come to love. With night's rearrival, Rachel is awakened by noises downstairs near the circular staircase and then hears a gunshot. Racing downstairs with Liddy, Rachel stumbles across the body of a stranger, shot to death but with no one else seemingly around. Gertrude soon comes to the scene, but neither Halsey nor Jack is home, having left just minutes before, according to Gertrude. The murdered man turns out to be that of Arnold Armstrong, the reprobate son of the house's owner, but no one knows what he was doing in the house. It soon becomes apparent that Jack Bailey is the chief suspect, at which point Rachel learns that Gertrude has been engaged to the man. Further, Halsey announces that he plans to marry Louise Armstrong.

The book continues with Rachel's trying to solve the case, made more dramatic when the newspaper reports that Armstrong's bank has gone bust in an age before the U.S. government insured people's money. Thus the niece and nephew have just lost all their money by someone's embezzling the money from the bank, where Jack serves as the clerk and Louise is the daughter of the owner. Jack gets immediately arrested for the crime, which affects both siblings more than learning that they have just become paupers in a society that cares greatly about status and money. But Rachel plugs away at the case, with many advances and set-backs as they face the uninvited visitor in the night and try to find a solution to the myriad mysterious goings-on.

The Circular Staircase particularly impressed me with its very well defined characters. Each of the main individuals has a distinct nature, in particular Rachel, whose dry wit during her narration adds humor to the book without making it come across as inappropriately funny. Her depictions of all the events well fit the gothic style of novel, with the creaking noises, secret hidden passages, and appearance of ghosts, even though Rachel refuses to admit that there are such things as ghosts. Depictions of creepy things get drawn out, just as is typical in the gothic novel. I found myself reminded of Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca in both its gothic, creepy details and also the way it keeps adding new details to develop an extended mystery plot. The book also reveals its Victorian influence, despite its being an American novel. It has a very British feel to it, with references to American cities coming almost jarringly. However, one must also keep in mind that the book was written over 100 years ago, so there are statements about African Americans that would be offensive if written today, such as describing the tone of a man's skin. But the descriptions are not made to be intentionally derogatory, just using terms that were in common usage in 1900.

As much as The Circular Staircase is both famous and influential to mystery writing, I personally found the book to drag out for a while. That is a characteristic of Victorian literature, seen in such books as The Moonstone or The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins. Those who have read Charles Dickens will recognize this style of writing. As someone who spends her time listening to more contemporary books, even when, such as Agatha Christie, they are not much more recent than Rinehart, I found this writing style to be tiresome. I would have preferred something more straightforward. I think it was the "Had I But Known" feature that actually made things a little tedious to me, as it got annoying that Rachel kept complaining that things would not have gone bad had both Gertrude and Halsey been honest about everything the whole time.

Lorna Raver performs the audiobook of The Circular Staircase. She does a good job of portraying the sense of the book, especially the eerieness of its gothic character. Further, she has created effective voices for each person. As Rachel, Raver adds a clear touch of drama to the book.

The Circular Staircase was worth reading just to gain exposure to this early piece of mystery literature. Even though it's not my personal preference, I can recognize its strengths, and those who are fans of gothic literature and Rebecca in particular will especially appreciate it. I give the book three stars on my own but five on the basis of its influence and literary qualities.

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