
The Case with Nine Solutions
When a doctor stumbles upon a dying man on a foggy night, he calls in Chief Constable Sir Clinton Driffield, unwittingly launching a serpentine investigation that quickly escalates to multiple murders. The case becomes a labyrinth of red herrings and cryptic clues: coded advertisements appear in the local paper, a crucial witness is blackmailed, and an anonymous source provides potentially fabricated evidence. With a central female figure drugged and three of the key players being chemists, the possible solutions multiply, each more perplexing than the last, challenging Driffield to untangle a meticulously crafted web of deceit. Originally published in 1928, *The Case with Nine Solutions* stands out in the Golden Age of Detective Fiction for its ingenious plotting and remarkable scientific rigor. Connington, a research chemist himself, grounds the intricate chemical details in palpable reality, elevating the whodunit beyond mere parlor games. It's a masterclass in misdirection and logical deduction, inviting readers to pit their wits against a puzzle box of a mystery that still feels fresh and intellectually stimulating today.









