The Doors of Death by Arthur B. Waltermire

(9 User reviews)   2890
By Benjamin Becker Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - Aisle Two
Waltermire, Arthur B., 1888-1938 Waltermire, Arthur B., 1888-1938
English
Hey, if you're into old-school mysteries with a side of the weird, you've gotta check out *The Doors of Death* by Arthur B. Waltermire. This book from the early 1900s is like a creepy puzzle box that keeps you guessing. The main conflict? A detective named John Tarleton has to keep a serial killer called 'The Goblin' from striking again. But here's the twist: the killings are tied to this secret society and a creepy ceremony meant to open some 'doorway' to the beyond. It's not just a whodunit—it's a 'why the heck are they doing that?' too. The tension builds as Tarleton digs deeper into the city's dark corners, uncovering strange rituals and even stranger motives. I won't give away the ending (no spoilers!), but let me tell you, the final reveal is satisfying, if a bit trippy for a '20s mystery. If you love atmospheric settings and puzzles that don't get handed to you, this is a fun dive into a bygone pulp era. It's a short, exciting read that makes you feel smart when you start connecting clues!
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The Story

The book *The Doors of Death* introduces us to John Tarleton, a somewhat weary detective who's seen it all. But what he hasn't seen is a killer called 'The Goblin,' an expert at dramatic, bone-chilling murders. As Tarleton investigates, he finds out the victims aren't random, they're part of some crazy, secret plan. The story heads into territory more bizarre than a standard murder mystery because the title means just what it says: Tarleton gets tangled with a creepy cult that thinks its leader can unlock the door between life and death. Yep, it's got that occult feel from a time when such things were taboo and exciting. The plot is fast-paced, with rival detectives, fogs over old towns, and those shivers you get from midnight close encounters. When he finally solves the puzzle, he reveals that the 'doors' are both real and symbolic, which tied his thoughts about superstition and crime together. I felt the twist worked because the story stayed with the flint-nosed logic of early mystery novels, like a hypnotizing stage show at a vintage theater.

Why You Should Read It

First off, it's short enough to devour in an evening—which I love when I don't need a huge commitment. But I actually felt surprise that the atmosphere was thick and British (though Mr. Waltermire wrote I think to reach at real crazy genre readers). Also, Tarleton works versus the limits of police instinct contrasted with the oddness of the ritual as himself both practical and droll. This to me wasn't a crafty philosophical approach. The book treats death not just taboo but genuine story thread. A plus is that today it feels sort of imaginative if a tad classic in type caracters—they live archetypes but he developed each, especially a weird scholar I think cracked many hints. It is best for readers that enjoy fading genre stuff from decades ago: it's spooky crime drama like reading Dracula as a detective story—horror mixing a solid clue-solving read gives this pulp good odd value.

Final Verdict

Perfect for history fans of thrillers that saw more creativity: if writers didn't treat stories and side stories as fluff exactly. It should allure who likes puzzle trips quick reading—involved but not overlong where patience is tested full of big step. Basically if 'werewolf mysteries' feeling than genuine occult called—part actual attempt drama crime original weird twenties twist that done work gets clever dark ending giving reads great satisfaction beyond puzzles everyday too. Is aiming any slower 500-page thick novel? No: go for that popcorn-snack mood for tiny interest time plus some atmosphere from earlier century period.



✅ Legal Disclaimer

This digital edition is based on a public domain text. Preserving history for future generations.

Nancy Gonzalez
7 months ago

Right from the opening paragraph, the concise summaries at the end of each section are a lifesaver. It cleared up a lot of the confusion I had previously.

Kimberly White
3 weeks ago

If you're tired of surface-level information, the wealth of information provided exceeds the average market standard. An excellent example of how quality digital books should be formatted.

Linda Martinez
11 months ago

Thought-provoking and well-organized content.

John Hernandez
8 months ago

I found the author's tone to be very professional yet accessible, the level of detail in the second half of the book is truly impressive. Simple, effective, and authoritative – what else could you ask for?

Paul Garcia
8 months ago

A brilliant read that I finished in one sitting.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (9 User reviews )

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