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''The Acquisitive Chuckle'' was a short story written by [[Isaac Asimov]] in 1971. It was first published in the January 1972 issue of ''Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine.'' He originally called it "The Chuckle," but the magazine's title was kept in subsequent uses of the story. It was the first of Asimov's stories of the [[Black Widowers]], an eccentric group of men who met once a month, which was based loosely upon the [[Trap Door Spiders]], a stag-club of which Asimov was a member.
'''The Acquisitive Chuckle''' was a short story written by [[Isaac Asimov]] in 1971. It was first published in the January 1972 issue of [[Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine]]. He originally called it "The Chuckle," but the magazine's title was kept in subsequent uses of the story. It was the first of Asimov's stories about the [[Black Widowers]], an eccentric group of men who met once a month. The story is based loosely upon the [[Trap Door Spiders]], a stag-club of which Asimov was a member.


== Plot Summary ==
== Plot Summary ==

Revision as of 03:01, 29 February 2012

The Acquisitive Chuckle was a short story written by Isaac Asimov in 1971. It was first published in the January 1972 issue of Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. He originally called it "The Chuckle," but the magazine's title was kept in subsequent uses of the story. It was the first of Asimov's stories about the Black Widowers, an eccentric group of men who met once a month. The story is based loosely upon the Trap Door Spiders, a stag-club of which Asimov was a member.

Plot Summary

Each month, the Black Widowers meet at a restaurant and converse over dinner with each other and their waiter. The host of the group brings the evening's guest. On this occasion, Geoffrey Avalon brings a Dr. Hanley Bartram to dinner. (It should be noted that all members of the club and all guests are doctors for the evening, and those with doctorates are referred to as "doctor doctor.")
Bartram tells the group of two business partners, Mr. Jackson and Mr. Anderson, the former tirelessly honest and the latter relentlessly dishonest. When Anderson shunted Jackson out of their venture, he spotted him acting in a suspicious manner inside Anderson's cluttered house, leading Anderson to suspect that the honest Jackson had stolen something. Unfortunately, due to the variety and extent of the objects within the dwelling, Anderson was unable to tell what was taken. He called in Bartram, who is an investigator, to discover what had been taken. When he failed, Anderson grew restless and morose, until he slowly wasted away.
The group tosses around theories as to what had been stolen, until Bartram reveals his true reason for attending the meeting: their waiter, Henry, is none other than the honest businessman in question. He asks Henry what it was that he stole from Jackson, and Henry replies that he had only taken Anderson's peace of mind.

Characters

Black Widowers

Geoffrey Avalon: Patent attorney; described as tall and patrician
Thomas Trumbull: Code expert of an unknown level; loud and argumentative in nature
Emmanuel Rubin: Free-lance author; talkative, self-centered, finicky (about food), and argumentative
Mario Gonzalo: Artist; as argumentative as Trumbull, if not as loud
James Drake: Chemist with a pulp-fiction fetish
Roger Halstead: Math teacher engaged in limerick summaries of the Iliad and the Odyssey Not in this story
Henry (honorary member): Waiter; polite, restrained, and unceasingly honest in nature

Particular to This Story

Hanley Bartram: Private investigator
Mr Anderson; Businessman; greedy with an obsession with collections
Mr. Jackson: Businessman; honest in appearance and reality

Quotes

"Henry, a scotch and soda for a dying man."
Thomas Trumbull

References

Tales of the Black Widowers