"The Press, Watson, is a most valuable institution, if you only know how to use it."- Sherlock Holmes (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's "The Adventure of the Dancing Men," from The Return of Sherlock Holmes, 1905)
Dorothy
Salisbury Davis was an American author of seventeen crime novels, several
historical works and numerous short stories. She was one of the founding
members of Sisters in Crime and served as President of the Mystery Writers of
America in 1956, who declared her a Grand Master in 1985, which were followed
by two additional lifetime achievement awards – dolled out by Bouchercon and
Malice Domestic. So Davis left her mark on the genre and it all began with a
crime/mystery novel that was released on the tail-end of the 1940s.
The
Judas Cat (1949) takes place in a small town,
called Hillside, which is situated in the Midwestern region of the United
States and "the town's chief claim to renown was the annual visit of a
famous inventor."
Once every year, the eminent inventor,
Henry Addison, descends upon Hillside to spend a day with the town’s recluse,
ninety-two year old Andy Mattson, but the inventor passed away several months
before the story opened. It was prophesized Mattson "wouldn't live long
after Addison went." However, even the speculators of the local rumor mill
were unable to envisage the consequences Mattson's death would have on certain
members of the community.
Mattson spent his days on his front
porch, "rubbing the soft neck of his cat with his leathery fingers," but
his nosey, gossipy neighbor, Mabel Turnsby, was the first one to notice that he "had not taken his customary place on the porch by moon" and saw the cat
pacing the length of the window seat inside – looking at her pleadingly "like
it was human." She notified the local Chief of Police, Fred Waterman, who
broke his way into the home, but had to shoot the crazed, half starved cat in
the process. What he finds in the living room makes it very apparent that the
cat had some part to play in the tragic death of its owner.
The body of Mattson is found huddled on
the sofa, scratches on his face and blood on his white shirt, but the most
striking was the terror in the eyes that had been black and fierce when he was
alive – as if he had been scared to death. A post-mortem shows his heart had
given out. However, the circumstances seem to suggest that the heart attack was
not a result of Mattson's advanced age.
Police Chief Waterman finds an ally in
Alex Whiting, a young publisher, who took over the Whiting Press from his
father, but was more interested, editorially, in the business of the Weekly
Sentinel. As a team, they pry open the skeleton-filled cupboard of the old
man and uncover many unusual and long-buried secrets: one of them is the
surprising discovery of Mattson's furtive occupation as a gifted toy maker.
There were drawers full of hand-crafted,
lifelike wooden wind-up figures of animals, people and vehicles. Mattson sold
many of his wooden figures to Joe Hershel, owner of a nearby toy factory, but
they came with the condition to not patent them and this is potentially of
interest since Hershel and the opportunistic mayor, Altman, are talking about
expanding the factory – which might give them a reason to get rid of the old
man.
Waterman and Whiting also learn Mattson
knew his way around a mathematical equation and was a skilled engineer, which
made him an adept toy maker and had collaborated with the design of some
hydraulic equipment, but problems arose with the filing of the patents. And
then there was his unusual friendship with the dead inventor, a missing will
and an intricate web of hidden (family) relationships. All of them cast an
ever-darkening shadow over the tight-nit community of Hillside. Something that
becomes very apparent when the carcass of the dead cat is stolen from the veterinary's
office and the laboratory is smashed up.
At one point in the story, Whiting
reflects how much their digging is resented by their neighbors, because the
resulting "malice and confusion had made them more suspect than the murderer
they were trying to find." This aspect of the plot comes to a head during a
town council meeting, where Waterman and Whiting are pretty much ordered to
drop the whole affair. I think this is by far the best and strongest point of The
Judas Cat: the depiction of a small, close-knit town in the United States
and the peculiar characters who dwell there. As well as the effect of
suspicious death has on them and their response to the resurfacing of long-held
secrets. This facet foreshadows the character-driven crime novels that would blitzkrieg
across the genre's landscape in the succeeding decades.
Guess this also explains why I ended up
disappointed with the detective element of the plot. The problems and mysteries
attached to the peculiar circumstances of Mattson's death managed to held my
attention throughout the book, but the explanations were very anti-climatic and
under whelming. I had hoped on a better explanation for the how of the murder,
but Davis stuck with the unsure, hare-brained method to put a notorious coffin
dodger out of the way. So no. I was far from impressed with the final tally of the
plot. Well, that surely dampened this review, didn't it?
So let me close-out this blog-post by
demonstrating some of my amazing deductive reasoning skills: Davis never gives
an exact location for Hillside and places the town somewhere in the Midwest of
the United States, which is an area comprising of twelve states. Ohio is the
only one that can be disregarded, because the story specifically mentioned that
the original settlers came from there. So that leaves us with eleven potential
candidates, but the (side) characters share an interesting commonality that narrows it down to just one state: a large
number of them have Nordic surnames (e.g. Mattson, Thorson, Sorenson, Olson,
etc). So there's a big chance Hillside was located in Minnesota, which is where
Scandinavian immigrants clustered when they left Europe for the Americas. It could also be
in the area where Wisconsin borders with Minnesota, but I think Minnesota is your
best bet to find so many people in one spot with Nordic surnames. Especially in those days.
Well, I better put this lackluster
blog-post out of its misery here. Hopefully, I'll have something better for the next
one. So keep checking back!
Well then, I definitely don't see a lot of Davis work in my near future - job done TC, thanks!
ReplyDeleteDon't juste take my word for it. Give her a shot yourself, because people like Boucher and our very own John Norris think highly of her.
DeleteThe only book by this author I have read is A Gentle Murderer and I remember enjoying it. Sorry to hear this one wasn't good, but thanks for the heads up.
ReplyDeleteSolely based on this book, I strongly suspect Davis is not a mystery writer who's not up my alley. But hey, you can't have them all.
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