TWO GEEKS ARE BETTER THAN ONE! ESPECIALLY WHEN THEY'RE TWINS! KELLAND'S LAST NOVEL AND HIS MOST DELIGHTFUL - THE CLASSIC SATURDAY EVENING POST SERIAL - FIRST TIME IN BOOK FORM!
The Big Swindle is Kelland's last book—and one of his best. Brimming with his trademark pixilated dialogue and zany romance, as well as his sometimes-awkward, sometimes-effervescent, always-memorable characters (The Saturday Evening Post, where the story was serialized, once told him to stop using "so many cockeyed characters" in his stories—but thankfully, Kelland ignored this advice).
"Urbane entertainment!" —Kirkus Reviews
Pete and Pet, the Du Chillon twins, are heirs to one of the oldest names in Europe and one of the largest fortunes in America. Two crazy kids with lots to do and even more to say, they have a habit of being newsworthy wherever they go.
In Paris—where they were fined for sneaking into the senate gallery and blowing a pound of snuff into the air to restore the Duke de Penthieve's honor after an insult by one of his political enemies—they're known as Les Gemeaux.
In London society—where they were royally entertained by the Queen after saving a member of the royal family from a royal embarrassment—they're called The Gemini.
In West Germany—where they had borne away to freedom one of their former University professors captured by the East German branch of the NKVD—they're Die Zwillinge.
And in Rome—where they had inspired the Pope to pen an encyclical liberalizing certain church practices—they answer to Due Gemelli.
But at home in Cow Bay, Long Island—where they were raised—they've always been known simply as "them pesky twins."
Now they are about to come into their majority and complete control of their inheritance—namely, Du Chillon Industries—but before they can explore their newfound power, they must use their signature wit and cunning to secure it. As they find themselves in the midst of a deadly plot to grab control of Du Chillon Industries (as well as every penny they own!), it becomes clear that they've been waiting for this moment their whole lives, and are more than ready to dispatch any swindlers who stand in their way.
Participants in the plot include:
In the middle of this muddle, Pete and Pet find themselves falling in love with:
And presiding over all, stands: