Difference between revisions of "The Riddle of the Fractal Monks"

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The cassette turns out to be a recording of a rambling and possibly drunk interview between [[Galton Felmersham]], the first biographer of [[Archie and Pye Vavasor|Archie and Pye]], and Archie and Pye themselves, in which they describe their meeting with the Head of the Order of the Romanesco at their mountain-top monastery. However, before they can find anything useful from the tape, it gets eaten by the cassette player and ends up breaking it.
 
The cassette turns out to be a recording of a rambling and possibly drunk interview between [[Galton Felmersham]], the first biographer of [[Archie and Pye Vavasor|Archie and Pye]], and Archie and Pye themselves, in which they describe their meeting with the Head of the Order of the Romanesco at their mountain-top monastery. However, before they can find anything useful from the tape, it gets eaten by the cassette player and ends up breaking it.
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Having reached another dead end, Dorothy and Tom discuss what they know so far. Tom admits that he told Bancroft about where he was staying in Burnham-on-Sea, and he also reveals that he left his notebook behind. Dorothy deduces that Bancroft must have stolen this on behalf of the monks and that they subsequently killed him to keep him quiet. This was how they found their way to both Margot and Patrice. She adds that the monks probably killed Sven to keep him quiet as well. Dorothy decides that she'd like to take a look at The Priory herself, so they both go to visit it. However, it turns out to be abandoned and booby-trapped. As soon as Dorothy opens the door, the entire place blows up.
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Back to the office, Ali has been behaving strangely and finally owns up that the only copy left of Patti's PhD thesis was stolen in the break-in and that she is distraught about this, but won't say why. She has also thrown Ali out for asking too many questions. Dorothy speculates that the monks came for Margot's laptop but stumbled on Patrice's thesis and took that instead. Apparently he research was in the field of fractals, and the thesis itself was classified for some reason.
  
 
(More to come...)
 
(More to come...)
  
 
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Revision as of 21:01, 9 June 2022


The Riddle of the Fractal Monks  
The Riddle of the Fractal Monks.jpg
First edition
Author Jonathan Pinnock
Cover artist kid-ethic
Language English
Publisher Farrago Books
Publication date 2020
ISBN 978-1-78842-216-1
Preceded by A Question of Trust
Followed by Bad Day in Minsk

The Riddle of the Fractal Monks is a book by Jonathan Pinnock. It is the third in the Mathematical Mystery series and was published by Farrago Books in April 2020.

Blurb

A mystery lands – literally – at Tom Winscombe’s feet, and another riotous mathematical adventure begins…

Tom Winscombe and Dorothy Chan haven’t managed to go on a date for some time, so it’s a shame that their outing to a Promenade Concert is cut short when a mysterious cowled figure plummets from the gallery to the floor of the arena close to where they are standing. But when they find out who he was, all thoughts of romance fly out of the window.

Just who are the Fractal Monks, and what does Isaac, last of the Vavasors and custodian of the papers of famed dead mathematical geniuses Archie and Pye, want with them? How will other figures from the past also demand a slice of the action? And what other mysteries are there lurking at the bottom of the sea and at the top of mountains? The answers lie in The Riddle of the Fractal Monks.

Critical Reception

The reception to the book was generally favourable, with one reviewer on Amazon comparing it to P.G.Wodehouse.

Summary of Plot