So
this has to be first "Murder in Retrospect" since 2019 not
starting on somber or outright depressing note, because the
first-half of the 2020s has been a ride, but now can delve right into
the annual blog roundup – beginning with the lists and some filler
stuff. This year, I cobbled together only three posts under "The
Hit List" banner. The first of these lists was "Top
10 Locked Room Mystery Novels That Need to Be Reprinted" for
obvious, self-explanatory reasons. "Top
10 Favorite Cases from Motohiro Katou's Q.E.D. vol. 26-50" is a
follow up to "Top
10 Favorite Cases from Motohiro Katou's Q.E.D. vol. 1-25" and "Top
7 Most Murderable "Victims" in Detective Fiction" is most
recent one. I probably could have picked a better topic for the last
list, but a few ideas are knocking about for next year. I also made
an ill-fated, largely ignored attempt to make headway in "The
Unbreakable Discussion on Impossible Alibis."
Last
year, I looked ahead at the reprints, translations and new detective
fiction scheduled to be published in the coming year and 2026 already
looks packed! Let's look what has been announced as forthcoming as of
this writing.
British
Library Crime Classics is going to publish reprints of Carter
Dickson's The Unicorn Murder (1936), Joseph Shearing's Airing
in a Close Carriage (1943), Carol Carnac's The Double Turn
(1956) and Leo Bruce's Jack on the Gallows Tree (1960). Yes,
I'm very pleased with the Carnac reprint! Galileo Publishers have
reprints of Joan Coggin's Why Did She Die? (1946) and Clifford
Wittings' Villainous Saltpetre (1962) in the pipeline, while
Dean Street Press is likely going to continue reissuing Brian Flynn
and Sara Woods. In the US, Otto Penzler's American Mystery Classics
is reprinting Lassiter Wren & Randle McKay's The Baffle Book
(1928), Mignon G. Eberhart's While the Patient Slept (1930),
Ellery Queen's The Tragedy of Y (1932), Phoebe Atwood Taylor's
Sandbar Sinister (1934), C. Daly King's Obelists Fly High
(1935) and the anthology Golden Age Suspense Stories (2026).
Pushkin Vertigo 2026 lineup doesn't disappoint either with
translations of Seishi Yokomizo's Yoru aruku (It Walks by
Night, 1948), Yukito Ayatsuji's Kuronekokan no satsujin
(The Black Cat House Murders, 1992), Akane Araki's Konoyo
no hate no satsujin (Murder at the End of the World, 2022)
and Haruo Yuki's Hakobune (The Ark, 2022). While the
BBB is going to publish the full translation of MORI Hiroshi's
Shiteki shiteki Jack (Jack the Poetical Private, 1997),
which they're currently serializing. When it comes to the
translations, you can really feel John Pugmire's absence by the lack
of Paul Halter and other French mysteries.
Before
going down the yearly list of best and worst mysteries, a few
comments about the list itself. Firstly, the Japanese honkaku
and shin honkaku mysteries have had a strong present on this
list ever since the translation wave began. And, usually, they
delivered the best locked room mysteries and impossible crimes of the
year. But most of the Japanese mysteries this year were either
non-impossible crimes or the impossibilities were minor elements.
Danro Kamosaki kindly filled that gap with his first two “Murder in
the Golden Age of Locked Rooms” novels. Secondly, I was pleased to
see a solid block of 2020s mysteries emerge when putting the list
together, exactly like I envisioned it all those years ago. Lastly, I
tried to bring more order to this years list, but it's still a mess.
I'm probably just going to do a top 20 next year.
So
let me all wish you a Merry Christmas and best wishes for 2026! Hope
to see all back next year when I do what I usually do.
Another
year, another list.
THE
BEST DETECTIVE NOVELS:
Golden
Age:
The
Moving House of Foscaldo (1925/26) by Charles
Chadwick
For
me, this was one of the most surprising reprints of the year! The
Moving House of Foscaldo is more a novel of adventure and romance
with detective story elements than a detective novel with a dash of
adventure and romance, but what it does it does very well. Not to
mention a surprisingly good and even original impossibility centering
on a string of disappearances from a old, creaking cliff side
windmill.
The
Garston Murder Case (1930) by H.C. Bailey
A
serious satire of the turn-of-the-century Gothic novel and introduces
Bailey's second series-character, the lawyer Joshua Clunk. A hall of
fame hypocrite who sucks sweets, hums hymns, tut-tuts the authorities
at every opportunity they hand him making Clunk a strangely
compelling anti-hero.
Top
Storey Murder (1931) by Anthony Berkeley
A
pretty straightforward, regular whodunit by Berkeley's own standards,
but, while not a masterpiece, it's a top-notch early 1930s mystery
showcasing Berkeley's talent for fabricating false-solutions. A small
scale version of Berkeley's The Poisoned Chocolates Case
(1929) and Leo Bruce's Case
for Three Detectives (1936).
From
This Dark Stairway (1931) by Mignon G. Eberhart
Set
in Melady Memorial Hospital, during an oppressive July heatwave,
where a frail, sickly patient scheduled for surgery disappears from a
sealed elevator and locked building – leaving only the body of his
surgeon behind. Nurse Sarah Keate and Policeman Lance O'Leary try to
figure out what, exactly, happened while keeping the hospital routine
running. A small gem of the 1930s American detective novel.
Fear
Stalks the Village (1932) by Ethel Lina White
This
is not your typical village mystery or countryside whodunit, but a
nicely done, leisurely-paced and oddly effective village thriller.
Rather than tossing a corpse on the hearth rug of a prominent
villager's library, it shows the slow, corrosive effect of poison pen
letters on a peaceful community of sun drenched flower gardens,
cobbled streets and Tudor cottages. Something good off the beaten
garden path.
Obelists
en Route
(1934) by C. Daly King
Considered
at one point be one of the ten rarest, most sought after out-of-print
Golden Age mysteries finally returned to print this year. This story
of murder aboard a coast-to-coast luxury train from New York City to
San Francisco was well worth the wait and an excellent addition to
the list of classic railway mysteries.
The
Sealed Room Murder (1934) by James Ronald
Unfortunately,
the titular sealed room is only a small, fairly routine part of the
plot tucked away near the end and not quite as good as Ronald's
Murder
in the Family (1936) or They
Can't Hang Me (1938), but an excellent, twisty piece of pulp
fiction you can breeze through in one sitting. Moonstone
Press and Chris Verner deserve a ton of praise for succeeding,
where past attempts had failed, in finally bringing James Ronald back
to print.
The
Burning Court (1937) by John Dickson Carr (a
reread)
A
favorite among Carr's fans for its daring, genre crossing epilogue,
but personally didn't care for the supernatural twist and preferred
the detective novel preceding the epilogue. A classic JDC mystery
with vanishing corpses, disappearing doorways and the lingering
presence long-dead poisoners.
Dance
of Death (1938) by Helen McCloy
A
debutante, who disappeared from her coming out party, is found dead
from heat stroke in a snowdrift on a New York sidewalk. A suitably
baffling first case for McCloy's psychiatrist sleuth, Dr. Basil
Willing, but even more remarkable than the unusual murder is its
background of medicine and cosmetic endorsements with the victim
being a 1930s analog version of a social media influencer. So,
ironically, it's a vintage mystery barely showing its age.
Nine
Times Nine (1940) by Anthony Boucher (a reread)
So
much better and more fun than I remembered! Boucher, a Californian,
had a front row seat when cults, pseudo-religious and fringe sects
flocked to California during the 1930s and '40s – which likely
provided the idea for this novel. A locked room mystery about the
impossible murder of a debunker, apparently done by a cult leader,
who miraculously disappeared from the locked and watched crime scene.
Nine Times Nine earned a lot of pasts glory for being a good
locked room mystery not written by Carr, but even without the unfair
comparison it remains a treat for impossible crime fanatics.
Such
Bright Disguises (1941) by Brian Flynn
A
brilliantly staged, but soul-crushingly grim, inverted mystery in
which Dorothy Grant and her secret lover, Laurence Weston, dispose of
Dorothy's husband in order to build a new life together. And they get
away with it. But even a perfect murder can demand a toll. A superb
psychological crime novel full of domestic suspense, heart-wrenching
tragedy and a very cruel twist.
Reunion
with Murder (1941) by Timothy Fuller
I
returned Timothy Fuller's Jupiter Jones series this year when picking
Keep
Cool, Mr. Jones (1950) from the big pile, but it's the two
(reverse) follow ups that earned a spot on the list. Reunion with
Murder counts as one of the better American college mysteries in
which Jupiter's dragged away from his wedding preparations to engage
on some prenuptial sleuthing when a Harvard reunion produces a body.
Fuller's best and most subtle detective novel with a brilliant
solution and memorable denouement.
Murder,
M.D. (1943) by Miles Burton
This
one came recommended, likely from Curt
Evans, as an excellent and noteworthy WWII village mystery. He
was not wrong! The story deals with a village that had its population
drained by the war machine and their unpopular locum killed under
suspicious circumstances. A mystery not only marked by good, solid
detective work, but a better hidden murderer and motive than is
usually the case with Rhode/Burton.
Wilders
Walk Away (1948) by Herbert Brean (a reread)
I
came away more than a little disappointed when first reading Wilders
Walk Away, because it was supposed to be one of those great,
nearly legendary, impossible crime novels not written by John Dickson
Carr or Hake Talbot – which is not what it is at all. Wilders
Walk Away is good, old-fashioned and fun whodunit compellingly
presented as a prototype of the small town thriller. The string of
inexplicably disappearances stretching across the centuries is just a
bonus.
An
English Murder (1951) by Cyril Hare (a reread)
A
Christmas mystery with all the apparent trappings of a good,
old-fashioned country house whodunit, but one taking place under
post-war austerities and the strain of politics at the dinner table.
And it's a whydunit with an original, cleverly-hidden motive.
Murder
as a Fine Art (1953) by E.C.R. Lorac (writing
as "Carol Carnac")
A
vintage mystery from the Golden Age's twilight years skewering and
satirizing both politics and modern art when a brutal, seemingly
impossible murder disrupts the bureaucratic routine at the Ministry
of Fine Arts. Lorac takes a surprisingly routine and procedural
approach to a non-routine murder case, but the loony solution to the
how is grand. Brutalism applied to the fine art of murder!
Moderns:
Reckoning
at the Riviera Royale
(2022) by P.J. Fitzsimmons
Fitzsimmons
is unquestionable angling to be become the Leo Bruce or Edmund
Crispin of the Golden Age revival. When it comes to the comedy,
Fitzsimmons is succeeding with flying colors, but where the plots are
concerned, the quality is uneven. The best, so far, are The
Case of the Ghost of Christmas Morning
(2021) and Reckoning
at the Riviera Royale.
In this fifth novel, Anty travels to the Riviera to discuss with his
mother the possibility of her having killed his father and has to
clear an elephant from a charge of murder. Great fun!
Black
Lake Manor
(2022) by Guy Morpuss
A
mind bending, genre crossing hybrid mystery, stretching across three
centuries, that impossible to encapsulate in a short synopsis, but
Morpuss delivered on the promise of a mystery with a twist on reality
and playing with the consequences. Only downside is Morpuss writes
standalones, not series, which means he's unlikely to ever return to
this Hard Light universe.
Everyone
in my Family has Killed Someone (2022) by Benjamin
Stevenson
The
first, of currently three, novels in the Ernest Cunningham series is
not merely a superbly plotted, funny meta-mystery, but a genuine,
character-driven continuation of the plot-oriented Golden Age
detective novel. Stevenson understands how to lie through his teeth
without uttering a single untrue word, technically speaking. A sign
the revival is slowly turning into a Second Golden Age.
Last
One to Leave (2022) by Benjamin Stevenson
Before
the success of the Ernest Cunningham series, Stevenson published two
detective novels starring a disgraced TV producer and a couple of
non-series e-novellas. Last One to Leave stages an impossible
crime in the middle of an endurance contest organized by a YouTube
content mill. A truly traditional mystery for the modern era!
Everyone
on this Train is a Suspect (2023) by Benjamin
Stevenson
A
sort of sequel-within-a-sequel. Ernest wrote a moderately successful
book based on his experiences from Everyone in my Family has
Killed Someone and finds himself aboard a train hosting a crime
writers festival filled with bickering authors and fans. Even better
than the first! Not to mention a great example of how to blend the
modern world with a good, old-fashioned whodunit.
The
Riddle of the Ravens (2024) by J.S. Savage
The
second novel in the Inspector Graves & Constable Carver series of
1920s locked room mysteries. This time, they're called to the Tower
of London when the ravens begin to come down with a touch of death.
And then the murders begin. A pretty solid, pleasingly tricky
historical mystery. Savage hasn't published anything this year. So,
hopefully, we'll get the third one next year.
Everyone
This Christmas Has a Secret (2024) by Benjamin
Stevenson
You
can say this series is my favorite discovery of the year and the
series “Christmas Special” doesn't disappoint. How can you not
like a Christmas mystery structured and clued like an advent calendar
about a seemingly impossible, onstage decapitation and magicians,
hypnotists and even a dead guy as potential suspects.
Hangings
at Hempel's Green (2025) by A. Carver
Practically
a standalone mystery as both Alex Corby and Cornelia Crow fulfill the
role of background characters, in favor of a poor stand-in character,
but the plot is a return to the first two novels – especially the
numerous impossible hangings. Simply a great village mystery, but
hope Alex and Cornelia take the center stage again in their fifth
outing.
The
House at Devil's Neck (2025) by Tom Mead
The
fourth and most inspired of the ongoing Joseph Spector series of
retro-Golden Age locked room mysteries. Mead employed the dual
narrative split between a haunted military hospital from the First
World War and London with a handful of impossible crimes between
them. The ending strongly suggests the next few novels will be taking
place under the cover of the blackouts and Blitz of World War II.
Translations:
Kuronekotei
jiken (Murder at the Black Cat
Cafe, 1946/47) by Seishi Yokomizo
This
latest translation is a twofer offering two shorter Kosuke Kindaichi
novels. The title novel is the best of the two and very different,
offbeat and somewhat noir-ish compared to to the previous Yokomizo
translations. A grim story concerning a faceless corpse, buried in a
shallow grave, behind the Black Cat Cafe in a dark, tucked away in a
seedy maze of backstreets, alleyways and passages – dotted with
cafes and brothels. What held this crime story up as a detective
story are the prologue and epilogue.
Kuroi
hakuchou (The Black Swan
Mystery, 1960) by Tetsuya Ayukawa
Written
decades before the shin honkaku boom, when the Japanese crime
story was dominated by the social school of Seicho Matsumoto of Ten
to sen (Points and Lines, 1958) fame, but this railway
mystery has the heart, soul and plot of a classic, fairly detective
novel – like a juiced up Christopher
Bush or Freeman
Wills Crofts. So even during their genre's “dark era,” the
Japanese continued to produce first-rate detective fiction.
Meirokan
no satsujin (The Labyrinth
House Murders, 1988) by Yukito Ayatsuji
The
third translation in the "Bizarre House Mysteries" series and
difficult to encapsulate with its dueling narratives,
story-within-a-story structure and the maze-like backdrop. A
first-rate, ghoulish fun meta-mystery that's not to be missed!
Tokeikan
no satsujin (The Clock Mansion Murders, 1991)
by Yukito Ayatsuji
A
400-page gold brick of a detective novel and my favorite entry Yukito
Ayatsuji's "Bizarre House Mysteries" series, but, since I very
recently reviewed it, I recommend taking a look at the review.
Nanakai
shinda otoko (The Man Who Died Seven Times,
1995) by Yasuhiko Nishizawa
From
all the Japanese titles on this years list, Nishizawa's The Man
Who Died Seven Times could very well be my personal favorite.
Kyutaro, a high school student, frequently experiences time loops in
which the same day resets, not replays, nine times. Very handy when
you need to ace a school exam, but horrifying when you try to prevent
your grandfather's murder. Like I said in my review, if it's not
perfect, it comes close enough.
Katou
no raihousha (Visitors to the
Isolated Island, 2020) by Kie Houjou
The
second title in the "Ryuuzen Clan" series of genre bending,
hybrid mysteries tackling the truly unknown this time. Not time
travel or immersive technology, but an otherworldly entities, the
Visitors, wreaking havoc on a small, remote island – while
remaining a classically-styled, fair play mystery. As good and
impressive as the first and third novel.
Oomarike
satsujin jiken (Murder in the
House of Omari, 2021) by Taku Ashibe
A
historical detective novel intricately weaving a tale of murder and
old sins casting large shadows presented as a family epoch covering
the first half of the previous century. Finally coming ahead as the
first American bombers begin to appear on the distant horizon. A
masterly done homage to honkaku legends like Akimitsu Takagi
and Seishi Yokomizo.
Misshitsu
ougon jidai no satsujin – Yuko no yakata to muttsu no trick
(Murder in the Golden Age of Locked Rooms – The
House of Snow and the Six Tricks, 2022) by Danro
Kamosaki
Yes,
these Japanese detective novel can be difficult to sum up in a few
short, snappy sentences and that's especially true of Danro
Kamosaki's "Murder in the Golden Age of Locked Rooms" series. A
series taking place in an alternate version of Japan where a
successful locked room murder caused an epidemic of impossible
crimes. A high school student, Kasumi Kuzushiro, is dragged into the
most complicated case of all with no less than six impossible crimes.
A love letter to the impossible crime story and locked room trickery!
The second
novel in the series follows a similar track, but now with seven
original, ingeniously-contrived and completely insane impossible
crimes on a remote island. So you may take this one as a double
entry.
Henna
e (Strange Pictures,
2022) by Uketsu
A
series of strange, apparently unconnected stories told and linked
together through pictures and drawings. I liked it perhaps more than
most around these parts and certainly liked it more than Henna
le (Strange Houses, 2021), but both should be regarded
as more than novelties or gimmick mysteries.
Rechercheur
De Klerck en de dode weldoener (Inspector De
Klerck and the Dead Philanthropist, 2025) by P. Dieudonné
A
very late, practically last minute entry on the list and another
timely Christmas mystery, but more importantly, it can stand with the
best in the series. Since I recently reviewed it, I suggests taking a
look at the review.
THE
BEST SHORT STORIES AND SHORT STORY COLLECTIONS:
Golden
Age:
"John
Archer's Nose" (1935) by Rudolph Fisher
"The
Devil in the Summerhouse" (1942) by John Dickson Carr
"The
Man Who Talked with Spirits" (1943) by Herbert Brean
Moderns:
"Captain
Leopold and the Ghost-Killer" (1974) by Edward D. Hoch
"The
Problem of the Pink Post Office" (1981) by Edward D.
Hoch (a reread)
"Over
the Edge" (2007) by James H. Cobb
Short
Story Collections:
The
Men Who Explained Miracles (1963) by John Dickson Carr (a
reread)
The
Will o' the Wisp Mystery (2024) by Edward D. Hoch
The
Indian Rope Trick and Other Violent Entertainments (2024) by
Tom Mead
It's
About Impossible Crime (2025) by James Scott Byrnside
THE
WORST DETECTIVE NOVELS:
Novels:
Give
Me Death (1934) by Isabel Briggs Myers
Well,
I was warned before hand it would be terrible. The premise begins
with a fascinating premise: members of a family driven to suicide
upon learning a terrible secret. A hazardous piece of information
that made death preferable, but the execution went from unintentional
self parody to a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
The
Belt of Suspicion (1936) by H. Russell
Wakefield
Better
written than plotted with barely anything to recommend, except the
writing and occasional modern, realistic touches to the
characterization. But an unremarkable bland as a detective novel.
The
Laughing Buddha Murders (1944) by Richard
Foster
A
pulp-style locked room mystery lacking a substantial plot to prop up
the story, while wasting an interesting character, Chin Kwang Kham,
who could have been the Charlie Chan of the Pulps.