File:Stout-WTAW-2.jpg

Licensing:
Though this image is subject to copyright, I feel its use is covered by the U.S. fair use laws because:
 * 1) This is an image created and uploaded for informational purposes only.
 * 2) The image is an accurate scan and includes all six photographs appearing the page, in the order of their appearance.
 * 3) This image is of much lower resolution than the original. It cannot be used for high-resolution printing, and any copies made from it will be of inferior quality.
 * 4) Use of this art in the article Where There's a Will adds to it significantly because it represents the first time an illustration was used in a Nero Wolfe novel.
 * 5) Use of this art in the article Where There's a Will adds to it significantly because these photographs are described in detail in chapter 15 of the novel — they hold the key to the solution of the mystery — but the photographs were printed in only the Farrar & Rinehart first edition. There was only one printing, in June 1940.
 * 6) Use of this art in the article Where There's a Will adds to it significantly because it represents an infamous publishing blunder on the part of Farrar & Rinehart. The photographs discussed in the novel were taken in July, but the photographs reproduced in the Farrar & Rinehart edition depict leafless trees and a landscape devoid of foliage. Rex Stout received many letters of complaint about the photographs, which he forwarded to his suitably embarrassed publisher. (John McAleer, Rex Stout: A Biography, pp. 280–281)
 * 7) Use of this art in the article Where There's a Will adds to it significantly because the sixth image purports to be a photograph of Archie Goodwin and Nero Wolfe, the primary characters in the novel — a unique occurrence.
 * 8) The copyright owner's rights to reproduce the image are not limited in any way.