Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Literature / TheCuriousOmission

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:


* RaisedCatholic: Mr Atwood and his friend were raised in different Protestant religions, but had become lapsed many years before this story. Despite this, his friend would often tease Mr Atwood about [[UsefulNotes/AmericanChurches the differences between the Churches]] that they didn't attend.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:


** While trying to solve the mystery, the characters mention the {{Creator/Disney}} adaptation, ''Disney/AliceInWonderland''.

to:

** While trying to solve the mystery, the characters mention the {{Creator/Disney}} adaptation, ''Disney/AliceInWonderland''.''WesternAnimation/AliceInWonderland''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
spelling error


After dinner, the brandy is served and Trumbull grills Mr Atwood. His friend has recently passed away, and left him [[DyingClue one last puzzle]]. Mr Atwood's friend, Lyon Sanders, [[KingOfGames loved games and puzzles]]. He would constantly invite Mr Atwood over to play BoardGames, CardGames, and games of his own devising. [[SilyWill In his will]], Mr Atwood's friend left him one last puzzle; he must find "The curious omission in Alice.", and solving that would allow him to collect ten thousand dollars. The reference to Creator/LewisCarroll is immediately figured out, and the rest of the meeting is spent trying to figure out what is missing from the famous story. Henry starts his [[TheSummation solution to the mystery]] by asking Mr Atwood if he is [[UsefulNotes/AmericanChurches Episcopalian]].

to:

After dinner, the brandy is served and Trumbull grills Mr Atwood. His friend has recently passed away, and left him [[DyingClue one last puzzle]]. Mr Atwood's friend, Lyon Sanders, [[KingOfGames loved games and puzzles]]. He would constantly invite Mr Atwood over to play BoardGames, CardGames, and games of his own devising. [[SilyWill [[SillyWill In his will]], Mr Atwood's friend left him one last puzzle; he must find "The curious omission in Alice.", and solving that would allow him to collect ten thousand dollars. The reference to Creator/LewisCarroll is immediately figured out, and the rest of the meeting is spent trying to figure out what is missing from the famous story. Henry starts his [[TheSummation solution to the mystery]] by asking Mr Atwood if he is [[UsefulNotes/AmericanChurches Episcopalian]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Page creation

Added DiffLines:

The 11th story in the ''Literature/BlackWidowers'' case files, Creator/IsaacAsimov wrote it for ''Tales of the Black Widowers'' (1974).

Halsted is host tonight, and his guest is Jeremy Atwood, a retired civil engineer. He has a nephew who teaches English, and this information sets Rubin off on a rant throughout the dinner about the deficiencies and failings of those who teach English literature.

After dinner, the brandy is served and Trumbull grills Mr Atwood. His friend has recently passed away, and left him [[DyingClue one last puzzle]]. Mr Atwood's friend, Lyon Sanders, [[KingOfGames loved games and puzzles]]. He would constantly invite Mr Atwood over to play BoardGames, CardGames, and games of his own devising. [[SilyWill In his will]], Mr Atwood's friend left him one last puzzle; he must find "The curious omission in Alice.", and solving that would allow him to collect ten thousand dollars. The reference to Creator/LewisCarroll is immediately figured out, and the rest of the meeting is spent trying to figure out what is missing from the famous story. Henry starts his [[TheSummation solution to the mystery]] by asking Mr Atwood if he is [[UsefulNotes/AmericanChurches Episcopalian]].

This story has been reprinted in ''Magazine/ElleryQueensMysteryMagazine'' (December 1991).
----
!!Tropes that weren't omitted from the story:
* DrivingQuestion: What is the curious omission in ''Literature/AlicesAdventuresInWonderland''?
* DyingClue: a dying man leaves a friend a legacy and says that the location of the safe deposit box where it is held can be found in "the curious omission in Alice". Justified as the dying man loved games, and wanted to leave his friend one last puzzle to solve. Rubin refers to it as "a dying hint". He also takes steps to make sure Mr Atwood didn't mishear him by including [[OnOneCondition the same condition in his last will]].
* ExactWords: The members (and Mr Atwood) assume that "Alice" is a reference to ''Literature/AlicesAdventuresInWonderland'', but the sequel's full title isn't ''Literature/ThroughTheLookingGlass'', it is ''Through the Looking Glass, and what Alice Found There'', and that's where the titular omission is.
* FairplayWhodunnit: The clues are all presented during the grilling, and if the audience is familiar enough with games and Creator/LewisCarroll's ''Alice'' stories, they can deduce where Mr Atwood's friend had hidden the name of the bank before Henry asks Mr Atwood about being Episcopalian.
* FancyDinner: The Literature/BlackWidowers meet every month at the Milano, a fancy restaurant in New York City, tonight's dinner begins with kidney and cream of leek soup, leading to roast stuffed duck and wild rice, and for dessert they have poire au vin and coffee.
* KingOfGames: Mr Sanders would apply his engineering focus and methodology to mastering every game to a high level. Because he had outlived his wife and didn’t have any children, he’d play those games with Mr Atwood, teaching him to be [[WorthyOpponent good enough to be a challenge to defeat]].
* TheNamesake: The title refers to the fact that ''[[Literature/ThroughTheLookingGlass Through the Looking Glass, and what Alice Found There]]'' has {{TabletopGame/Chess}} pieces: pawns, rooks, knights, queens, and kings, but doesn't have any bishops.
* OnOneCondition: Mr Atwood's friend left him ten thousand dollars, on the condition that he withdraw it from a safe-deposit box within one year from the reading of the will, otherwise it would go somewhere else.
* PhoneInDetective: Henry is able to deduce what unusual and interesting thing was absent from ''Alice'' because the problem was entirely a logic puzzle constructed for Mr Atwood to solve.
* RaisedCatholic: Mr Atwood and his friend were raised in different Protestant religions, but had become lapsed many years before this story. Despite this, his friend would often tease Mr Atwood about [[UsefulNotes/AmericanChurches the differences between the Churches]] that they didn't attend.
* ShoutOut:
** Mr Atwood lists a number of TabletopGames that he would play with Mr Sanders; TabletopGame/ChineseCheckers, ''{{TabletopGame/Parcheesi}}'', {{TabletopGame/Backgammon}}, ''{{TabletopGame/Monopoly}}'', {{TabletopGame/Checkers}}, {{TabletopGame/Chess}}, {{TabletopGame/Go}}, three-dimensional TabletopGame/TicTacToe, {{TabletopGame/Bridge}}, and [[{{TabletopGame/Rummy}} gin rummy]].
** The mystery revolves around a clue in ''Literature/AlicesAdventuresInWonderland'', by Creator/LewisCarroll.
** While trying to solve the mystery, the characters mention the {{Creator/Disney}} adaptation, ''Disney/AliceInWonderland''.
** When Henry presents the solution, he says they should check ''[[Literature/ThroughTheLookingGlass Through the Looking Glass, and what Alice Found There]]'' by Creator/LewisCarroll.
* TitleDrop: The title is used as the DrivingQuestion of the work, Mr Atwood must discover "the curious omission" from ''Literature/AlicesAdventuresInWonderland'', because that's [[OnOneCondition the condition for collecting the ten thousand dollars that his recently deceased friend left him]].
* SnowMeansCold: In a mix of [[ShowDontTell telling and showing]], the outside temperature is established as very cold due to the half-inch of snow outside of the Milano, which delayed Halstead and Mr Atwood.
* SoreLoser: Mr Atwood's friend, Sanders, would rarely lose, but when he did, he'd be angry or embarrassed, and spend several days in intense focus analysing the game he had lost so that he could best Mr Atwood the next time.
* TheSummation: Henry is prepared to explain where the information is hidden once he learns that Mr Atwood is [[UsefulNotes/AmericanChurches Episcopalian]], because it relates to both the omission in ''[[Literature/ThroughTheLookingGlass Through the Looking Glass, and what Alice Found There]]'' and the dead man's tendency to mock Mr Atwood's religion.
* WorthyOpponent: (InvokedTrope) According to Mr Atwood, if his friend was [[KingOfGames winning too many games or too easily]], he would teach Mr Atwood some of his strategies so that the games they played would be more interesting.
----

Top