This entertaining short story collection features Professor Augustus
S.F.X. Van Dusen, nicknamed "The Thinking Machine"--a brilliant but
abrasive scientist who proves time and again that any puzzle can be
solved by the application of logic.
Could you beat the world chess master in one try if you'd never played
or studied the game? Or plot and execute a successful escape from an
inescapable prison cell? And could you do it at the turn of the
twentieth century, without benefit of modern technology? Sound
impossible?
Never use that word in the presence of The Thinking Machine--it angers
him greatly and does not give him a favorable impression of the user.
Professor Augustus S.F.X. Van Dusen knows that both feats are indeed
possible, having accomplished them himself. But he also applies his
superior intellect and deductive reasoning to more official ends--namely
helping the police solve "impossible" crimes.
With assistance from reporter Hutchinson Hatch, who is only too happy to
suggest potential cases and then write about the outcome, The Thinking
Machine proves that no puzzle is unsolvable--not corporate espionage,
nor a kidnapped baby, nor a pilfered necklace, And certainly not a
"perfect murder."