"You see... assuming this to be murder, we have to go look for a motive."- Dr. Gideon Fell (John Dickson Carr's The Case of the Constant Suicides, 1941)
As was noted in my review of Death
at St. Asprey's School (1967), I suffer from a chronic lack of
enthusiasm for Leo
Bruce's secondary series, revolving around the sleuthing activities of a
history teacher, named Carolus Deene, which always struck me as the antithesis
of his Sgt. Beef stories – an excellent series of bright, humorous and clever
parodies of the detective story. On the opposite side of the spectrum, you'll
find the dark, moody and plodding affairs of the Deene books.
Now, I do not mind that a darker,
grainier and plodding mood replaced the light-hearted and comedic approach in Bruce's
second series. That's not my (main) bone of contention with these stories.
It is that, whereas the Sgt. Beef novels
have pleasantly paced, naturally flowing narratives, the story progress in the
Deene stories stagger, from one chapter to another, like a rusty automaton –
which could have been a forgivable offense if it weren't for a severe
deficiency of originality. I've read three books from this series and two of
them have plots that leaned very heavily on recycled or even "borrowed"
material, but this is, reportedly, par for the course for this series.
In the comment section of my review of Death
at St. Asprey's School, Nick Fuller, who blogs (far too infrequently) at Escape to Adventure, opined
about the Deene series that they are, at best, "very small beer" with
dreary settings, plodding interviews and "gimmicky plots cribbed from better
writers." Not exactly what a publisher is looking for in a potential cover
blurb! I also found it slightly discouraging, but there was one specific book I
wanted to sample, no matter what, for which I had a very obvious and
predictable reason: the story in question was listed by Robert Adey in Locked
Room Murders and Other Impossible Crimes (1991). Hey, I said it was obvious
and predictable.
Nothing Like Blood (1962) is the eleventh Carolus Deene novel and this time the
tangled mess of trouble is brought to him by an old friend of his mother,
Helena Gort, who "had been one of those adventurous women who made arduous
journeys in dangerous places" and "wrote lively books about them,"
but her temporary residence at an English seaside guest house proved to be one
of her strangest experiences – where everything appeared to be rather sinister.
The place is called Cat's Cradle and the
house is a long, plain-looking structure perched on a rocky headland, looking
out over the sea, which has its cliff-side on the eastern side of the home. It
was recommended by acquaintances of Helena Gort, who had a very comfortable
stay, but when Helena arrives she finds all of her fellow guests on edge.
Some of them were very jittery and "an
atmosphere of suspicion and intrigue" permeated the air. The source of all
of the unspoken suspicion and unease seemed to sprang from the death of one of
the guests, a Mrs. Mallister, who had passed away two months previously of heart
disease. It was hardly an unexpected passing: Mrs. Mallister "had been under
a sentence of death for some time" and she had been on her deathbed for
days when the end finally came. So everything seemed above board, but was there
anything more to her death? After all, there are "heart attacks and heart
attacks." Or so the rumors go!
Leo Bruce |
Well, Helema decided to keep a diary and
the first half of the story consists of these diary entries, which are used to
flesh out the problem, setting the stage for an impossible murder and
introducing the characters, but the characterization is a bit of a weakness in
this one – because all of the characters are defined by their eccentricities or
lack thereof. There is, for example, a retired colonial bishop, named Grissell,
who has the habit of lapsing into anecdotes, but can never remember whether his
stories happened in such places Basutoland or Bloemfontein or Zanzibar or
Zesfontein. It's somewhat annoying when used as a recurring and defining
personality trait.
The diary entries cover chapters 2 to 9
and ended when the story began to drag itself out, which was also the point
when Bruce introduced the locked room angle of the plot. It was a sure-fire way
to get my attention.
A pair of holiday-makers from a nearby
camp decided to take out a rowing-boat for a spot of moonlight peddling, but when
they came close to the house they saw one window "lit up like a stage" and
a woman was seen smoking cigarette on the stone balcony – when, all of a
sudden, she took a dive over the edge. Right on the rocks below. Nobody else was
seen on the stone balcony, the door to her bedroom was locked and the only key
was found on the body. So, as to be expected, the Coroner's Inquest returned a
verdict of suicide, but the explanation that proved this apparent suicide to be
murder was surprisingly clever, original and well clued. A very simplistic
trick, but one that's clever and fresh.
I expected an entirely different kind of
explanation based on the presentation of the crime and the series reputation
for cribbing plots, which made me settle down for a solution that was very
similar to those from an episode from the Cabin B-13 radio program,
namely "The
Bride Vanishes," and The Whistling Hangman (1937) by Baynard
Kendrick. As a consequence, I also settled down on the wrong culprit, but
this may've, somewhat, saved the book for me. My very mundane, dime-a-dozen
explanation was proven completely wrong by a far more competent solution that
showed a bit inventiveness and was very well clued. It was even hinted at how
it was possible that the murderer appeared to be invisible to the witnesses. The
way in which the supposed suicide was tied to the apparent natural death was
also somewhat off the beaten track.
So these (connecting) parts of the
overall plot were pretty good, but, sadly, they're stuck in an unengagingly
written, slow-moving and mediocre novel, populated with cardboard characters,
which made for a very average and uneven mystery novel. Simply put: the plot
deserved a better story.
Well, I'm not sure if and when I'll
return to the Carolus Deene series, but my next Leo Bruce is going to be one of
the last two Sgt. Beef novels on my TBR-pile, which are Case Without a
Corpse (1937) and Neck and Neck (1951). Hopefully, I'll pick
something better and easier to write about for my next review. Don’t touch that
dial!
Beef was not the same after the war; probably a case of post-war malaise.
ReplyDeleteBruce's stream of creativity does seem to have ebbed away during those years.
DeleteHmmmmm. Seems like most, if not all, of the Carolus Deene titles that have been reviewed have been panned. Are there any Deene titles worth reading/ purchasing/ collecting?
ReplyDeleteI've only read three of them and none of them comes recommended as bait to hook readers to the series. Furious Old Women was recommended to me, but I have not read that one for myself, so I can't say if that one is any good.
DeleteGiven how well Bruce applied himself to the impossible crime in Case for Three Detectives, I was surprised that he didn't return to it on a regular (or even mildly occasional) basis. It's great to know that there's some original and clever manipulation going on here, too, just a shame that it doesn't quite join up as a book overall.
ReplyDeleteBruce wrote an impossible disappearance story, "Holiday Task," which can be found in Murder in Miniature and features Sgt. Beef, but the trick has been used before in another (famous) short story. So that's hardly a prolific output when looking solely at his impossible crime stories.
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