Les Blatt

May 192013
 

You might think of it as a disgruntled author's revenge: an arrogant and well-disliked publisher gets into his small, private elevator on the top floor of his office building. The door locks automatically and the elevator descends. The publisher can even be seen through windows in the locked access doors, and he is standing in the elevator as it descends. The elevator never stops. Yet suddenly a gunshot is heard, and when the elevator car reaches the ground floor, the publisher is dead - shot through the heart. And there is no way anyone could possibly have shot him in that elevator, especially as there is no gun to be found either in the car or in the elevator shaft.

Impossible? Why of course! Welcome to Fatal Descent, by Carter Dickson and John Rhode - or, to give them their correct names, John Dickson Carr and Cecil Street. Both authors were masters of the impossible crime novel as well as being friends - and they collaborated on just this one book, in 1939. Fatal Descent is the subject of today's audio review on the Classic Mysteries podcast, and you can listen to the full review by clicking here.

Fatal Descent is a fascinating mystery, with two sleuths who team up to solve it. One, the Police Surgeon, Dr. Horatio Glass, is very much the type of detective favored by John Dickson Carr - full of ideas that give elegant solutions to impossible problems, brilliant in their conception and flawed only in that they are invariably wrong. Chief Inspector David Hornbeam is a realist who seeks the scientific explanations for crime, and he is quite representative of the kind of sleuth that Street wrote about under his "John Rhode" pen-name. Between them, they will eventually solve the case - but only after a second murder.

It’s a fine story, written with wit and good humor, quite fairly clued for the reader who can find the hints, and with some first-rate characters. It’s a pity that Street and Carr only wrote this one mystery together. Readers who enjoy a good impossible crime story really should read Fatal Descent. It’s been out of print for a while, but there is now an e-book edition available.

This is another entry in Bev's My Reader's Block blog Vintage Mysteries Reading Challenge. As this 1939 mystery was originally published under the title Drop to His Death, I am entering it in the category called "A Mystery by Any Other Name," a book that has been published under more than one title.

 

May 162013
 

Some very good news today from Open Road Media, a company which has been making a significant number of Golden Age mysteries, both from the US and from England, available in electronic editions. The latest author to benefit from this treatment is Stuart Palmer, whose series detective, Hildegarde Withers, is one of my perennial favorites. Palmer frequently referred to her more-or-less affectionately as "that meddlesome old battleaxe," but Hildy Withers is nobody's fool, and she makes an interesting team with New York City Inspector Oscar Piper, with whom she maintains a rather prickly friendship.

Palmer created the character of Hildegarde Withers with actress Edna May Oliver in mind, In fact, Oliver did star as Hildy in several popular movies in the mid-1930s, opposite James Gleason as Inspector Piper.

As a general rule, the stories are well-plotted and told with some nice humorous touches. I've already reviewed nine of Palmer's books on this blog, and you can find a full list on the backlist page - just scroll down (the authors are listed alphabetically). I'll be reviewing more books from the series, now that Open Road is making them available. If you haven't met Hildegarde Withers...now is the time! I should mention that Open Road is also publishing some additional Stuart Palmer titles that do not have Hildy - I'll be looking forward to trying them as well.

May 152013
 
I wanted to share what, to me, is an interesting footnote on Q. Patrick's Murder at Cambridge. I see that the original title of that 1933 mystery was Murder at the 'Varsity. Perhaps it's just a sign that I wasn't as good an English major as I had thought, but it hadn't occurred to me that "varsity," as in varsity-level high school and college sports, was an abbreviation for, or curruption of, the word "university." Of course it is, particularly with an English accent. Who says reading mysteries can't be educational?
May 132013
 

Exciting news for lovers of classic mysteries: Amazon will be republishing all 49 of Leslie Charteris's books featuring the character Simon Templar, known as "The Saint," as well as all 65 of the Mrs. Bradley books by Gladys Mitchell along with six of her other books that do not feature Mrs. Bradley.

Although I don't think I have ever read any of the original books, I remember The Saint from the series of "B" movies which were always on television when I was growing up, often featuring George Sanders in the title role. And I've written here - frequently - about some of the Mrs. Bradley mysteries, many of which have never been published in the U. S.

Apparently these will start appearing sometime later this year, under Amazon's Thomas & Mercer imprint.

S. T. Karnick has more details at his blog, The American Culture.

May 122013
 

Another of England's ancient and long-respected universities is the setting for an entertaining Golden Age mystery by Q. Patrick. His 1933 book, Murder at Cambridge, follows the adventures of an American undergraduate student at that extremely English university, as he first falls in love at first sight with a young woman student - and then finds himself involved in a murder in which that young lady may have played a critical part. Murder at Cambridge is the subject of today's audio review on the Classic Mysteries podcast, and you can listen to the entire review by clicking here.

In Murder at Cambridge, we meet Hilary Fenton, an American who finds much to like at the university. He enjoys student life, his studies, the occasional escapades and pranks of his fellow students. But one day, sitting in class, he sees an unknown young woman sitting across the lecture hall from him. He immediately falls in love with her (all right, this IS Golden Age fiction, after all!), and tries to learn who she may be.

But before he can do so, he finds the body of another student, a young man who lives on the same stairway at Cambridge as Hilary does. And he thinks he sees the mysterious young woman coming down the stairs from the victim's rooms at what must have been right around the time of the murder.

So Hilary does what any young man (at least of the period) would do: he proceeds to meddle in the investigation, hiding potentially critical evidence and generally being a nuisance. Fortunately for him, and for the course of justice, the police officer in charge, Inspector Horrocks, is nobody's fool. He sees through Hilary's deceptions pretty quickly and still invites the young man to help him investigate. Working together, they must discover the relationship between that mysterious young woman and the victim and the secret that lies hidden at the heart of the murder. There will be a second murder, and the young woman herself will narrowly escape becoming a victim.

While all this is going on, we are given a student's-eye view of Cambridge University life in the early 1930s - perhaps too much so for some tastes. The author even includes a glossary of student terms, in an effort to help readers decipher some of the jargon - though even he cannot make me understand the game of cricket.

A word about the author: "Q. Patrick" was one of several names used by four different writers working together in various combinations between the 1930s and 1950s. Some books appeared under the names of "Patrick Quentin" and "Jonathan Stagge." Murder at Cambridge, though, appears to have been the solo work of Richard Wilson Webb, the only book he wrote without collaborating with another author. It is an entertaining book, and the university setting certainly adds to the reader's enjoyment of a pretty tight mystery. A British publisher, Ostara Publishing, has brought Q. Patrick's Murder at Cambridge back into print as one of a series of mysteries set in that fine old University town. The paperback, I think, is a bit on the pricey side, but there is also an edition for the Amazon Kindle which is available for less than half the price of the paper copy.

Murder at Cambridge is another entry in the My Reader's Block Vintage Mystery Reading Challenge. Its setting makes it a natural for the category called "Jolly Old England."

I would be remiss if I did not tell you that I came to Murder in Cambridge through a post by mystery writer Martin Edwards, on his excellent blog, "Do You Write Under Your Own Name," which you will find linked from my blogroll on the right.  His review includes more information about "Q. Patrick," and I commend the article to you.

 

May 092013
 

It has been a busy week for mystery lovers and mystery authors, with the awarding of this year's Edgars by the Mystery Writers of America and the naming of the Agatha winners from Malice Domestic.

Now, it's the turn of the Anthonys - the awards named for mystery author and influential mystery critic Anthony Boucher. The organizers of Bouchercon 2013 have announced the short list of nominees for the top awards, as chosen by Bouchercon attendees:

BEST NOVEL
Dare Me – Megan Abbott
The Trinity Game – Sean Chercover
Gone Girl – Gillian Flynn
The Beautiful Mystery – Louise Penny
The Other Woman – Hank Phillippi Ryan

BEST FIRST NOVEL
Don’t Ever Get Old – Daniel Friedman
The Professionals – Owen Laukkanen
The Expats – Chris Pavone
The 500 – Matthew Quirk
Black Fridays – Michael Sears

BEST PAPERBACK ORIGINAL
Whiplash River – Lou Berney
Murder for Choir – Joelle Charbonneau
And She Was – Alison Gaylin
Blessed are the Dead – Malla Nunn
Big Maria – Johnny Shaw

BEST SHORT STORY
“Mischief in Mesopotamia” – Dana Cameron, EQMM, Nov 2012
“Kept in the Dark” – Sheila Connolly, Best New England Crime Stories: Blood Moon
“The Lord is My Shamus” – Barb Goffman, Chesapeake Crimes: This Job is Murder
“Peaches” – Todd Robinson, Grift, Spring 2012
“The Unremarkable Heart” – Karin Slaughter, MWA Presents: Vengeance,

BEST CRITICAL NONFICTION WORK
Books to Die For – John Connolly and Declan Burke, eds.
Blood Relations – Joseph Goodrich, ed.
More Forensics and Fiction – D.P. Lyle, M.D.
The Grand Tour – Mathew Prichard, ed.
In Pursuit of Spenser – Otto Penzler, ed.

As always, congratulations and good luck to all the nominees. The awards will be presented at Bouchercon 2013, the 44th annual conference, which will be held in Albany, New York, this September.

May 072013
 

With the 25th anniversary edition of Malice Domestic having concluded this past Sunday, it is time, clearly, to begin making plans for next year's conference.

Why, you ask? Well a partial answer would have to include the honorees next year:

  • Guest of Honor: Kathy Lynn Emerson;
  • Toastmaster: Earlene Fowler;
  • Lifetime Achievement Awards - three, count 'em, three: Dorothy Cannell, Joan Hess and Margaret Maron;
  • Malice Remembers: Reginald Hill
  • Poirot Award: Tom Schantz
  • Fan Guest of Honor: Audrey Reith

Add to that honor roll the usual features of the Malice Domestic program - panels galore, interviews with the honorees, book signings, Malice Go Round to expose attendees to as many authors as possible, the voting for, and awarding of, the Agatha Awards, and so much more. It all happens May 2 to May 4, 2014, at the Hyatt Regency in Bethesda. And, yes, registration is open now.

My wife and I are already registered. We hope to see you there. If you've never been to a Malice Domestic conference, you will be amazed and delighted. Promise.

May 062013
 

You can do a lot of celebrating with a jereboam of champagne. The giant bottle, four times the "normal" size of a bottle of wine, was to be the centerpiece of a theatrical birthday party. Instead, it became a murder weapon. Fortunately for the New Zealand authorities, one of the witnesses to the entire sorry affair was an English detective - Detective Inspector Roderick Alleyn of Scotland Yard. And that proved to be most unfortunate for someone who had carefully plotted what must have seemed like a perfect murder.

In essence, that's the story told in Vintage Murder, by Ngaio Marsh. First published in 1937, the fifth book in Marsh's long series of mysteries starring Detective Inspector Alleyn, it is the subject of today's audio review on the Classic Mysteries podcast, and you can listen to the entire review by clicking here.

In "Vintage Murder," we are introduced to the members of the Carolyn Dacres Comedy Company, a small but mostly successful English theater company which, at the time of this novel, is on tour, traveling to a town in New Zealand for a series of performances. Riding in the same compartment of the train with members of the theater group is Scotland Yard detective Roderick Alleyn, who is traveling on holiday through the area while recovering from surgery.

Tensions are running high among some of the members of the company. Alleyn, despite his efforts to avoid any possible involvement, finds himself present at a birthday party held onstage after a performance of the show  for the company's leading lady. During the course of the party, arrangements have been made for a jereboam of champagne to be lowered gently from the flies above the stage, as a surprise. Instead, it comes crashing down, killing the person sitting underneath it.

Despite Alleyn's reluctance, he finds himself advising the local police in their investigation - for he, and they, quickly determine that it was no accident. And, among the limited field of suspects, it is up to Alleyn to identify the villain.

There is a great deal to enjoy in Vintage Murder. Ngaio Marsh, in addition to her writing, held a "day job" as producer/director for a successful New Zealand acting troupe, and her mysteries placed in theatrical settings are among her best works. She is wonderful at evoking character in a few lines. For example, here is how she describes one of the character actors in the company:

"Old Brandon Vernon looked a little the worse for wear. The hollows under his cheek bones and the lines round his eyes seemed to have made one of those grim encroachments to which middle-aged faces are so cruelly subject. A faint hint of a rimy stubble broke the smooth pallor of his chin; his eyes, in spite of their look of sardonic impertinence, were lackluster and tired. Yet when he spoke one forgot his age, for his voice was quite beautiful, deep, and exquisitely modulated. He was one of that company of old actors that are only found in the West End of London. They still believe in using their voices as instruments, they speak without affectation, and they are indeed actors."

As a New Zealander, and a theatrical producer, Marsh was writing about the things and people she knew and loved. That comes across very strongly in Vintage Murder. It has been republished by the Felony & Mayhem Press. It is highly recommended.

Vintage Murder is another of my entries in the Vintage Mystery Reading Challenge under way at the My Reader's Block blog, in the category, "Staging the Crime." If you haven't been checking the challenge, you are missing some great reading - it's not too late to start!

 

May 052013
 

The 2013 Agatha Awards were presented during a banquet tonight at the 25th annual Malice Domestic conference, honoring the traditional mystery. The award winners:

  • Best Novel: The Beautiful Mystery, by Louise Penny
  • Best Historical Mystery: Dandy Gilver and an Unsuitable Day for Murder, by Catriona McPherson
  • Best First Novel: Lowcountry Boil, by Susan M. Boyer
  • Best Nonfiction: Books to Die For: The World's Greatest Mystery Writers on the World's Greatest Mystery Novels, by John Connolly/Declan Burke
  • Best Short Story: "Mischief in Mesopotamia", by Dana Cameron, Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine
  • Best Children's/Young Adult Novel: The Code Busters Club, Case #2: The Haunted Lighthouse, by Penny Warner

For a complete list of nominees and winners (including information about winners in past years, click here.

In addition, these special awards and honors were also presented:

  • Lifetime Achievement Award: Aaron Elkins
  • Amelia Award: Carolyn Hart
  • Guest of Honor: Laurie R. King
  • International Guest of Honor: Peter Robinson
  • Fan Guest of Honor: Cindy Silberblatt

Congratulations to all the nominees and winners!

May 032013
 

The Mystery  Writers of America presented the 2013 Edgar Awards last night at their annual banquet in New York City. Among the winners:

  • Best novel: Live by Night by Dennis Lehane
  • Best first novel: The Expats by Chris Pavone
  • Best paperback original: The Last Policeman: A Novel by Ben H. Winters
  • Best fact crime: Midnight in Peking: How the Murder of a Young Englishwoman Haunted the Last Days of Old China
  • Best critical/biographical: The Scientific Sherlock Holmes: Cracking the Case with Science and Forensics by James O'Brien
  • Best short story: "The Unremarkable Heart" - Mystery Writers of America Presents:  Vengeance by Karin Slaughter
  • Best juvenile: The Quick Fix by Jack D. Ferraiolo
  • Best young adult: Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein
  • TV episode teleplay: "A Scandal in Belgravia" - Sherlock, Teleplay by Steven Moffat
  • Robert L. Fish memorial: "When They Are Done With Us" - Staten Island Noir by Patricia Smith
  • Mary Higgins Clark award: The Other Woman by Hank Phillippi Ryan
  • Grand Master award: Ken Follett, Margaret Maron
  • Raven award: Oline Cogdill, Mysterious Galaxy Bookstore, San Diego & Redondo Beach, CA
  • Ellery Queen award: Akashic Books

 Congratulations to all the award winners and nominees, and you'll find a complete list here at the MWA site. Looking forward to seeing many of them later today at Malice Domestic!

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