Thomas B. Black was an
American writer who began his career as a jack-of-all-trades, working
in a refinery, a credit institution, a bakery and a munitions
factory, but he also tried his hands at writing crime-fiction and his
first novel was The Whitebird Murders (1946) – which was
rapidly followed by two more novels in 1946 and 1947. His fourth and
final novel, Four
Dead Mice (1954), was published seven years later.
Black has been pretty
much forgotten today, but during his short-lived career he had no
less a figure than the lauded mystery critic and writer Anthony
Boucher in his corner.
In his short, but snappy,
reviews for The San Francisco Chronicle, Boucher praised The
Whitebird Murders as "one of the better recent hardboiled
debuts" and marked The 3-13 Murders (1946) as "a
far above average hardboiled novel" with "good dialogue,
credible toughness, solid plotting" and "plentiful excitement."
I'm an aficionado of, as Boucher calls it, the simon-pure
jigsaw-puzzle detective story, but Rex
Stout and Bill
Pronzini have given me an appreciation for that stylish,
incorruptible voice of the hardboiled gumshoe – who prowl those
mean streets in fedoras and trench-coats. I remember someone
describing them as a modern-day knight's quest or realistic superhero
stories about capeless crusaders, but I believe this genre is at its
best when there are plots to go with the stories.
So, needless to say,
Boucher's review, short as it was, caught my eye and he didn't
overstate the merits of the book. The 3-13 Murders proved to
be one of the best, if not the best, hardboiled detective novels I
have read.
Al
Delaney is a private-detective for the Redman Detective Agency in
the fictitious Chancellor City, but when his boss, Giles Redman, was
murdered he took over the agency. However, Delaney had refused to
remove his name from the frosted glass door and honored his memory
with "a wall-hung Indian head" and a large photograph of
Redman. The picture and wooden head are flanked by "photostatic
copies" which explained "the fate of the persons
responsible for his death." And this unfortunately spoiled the
name of his murderer.
Delaney has the looks of
a streetwise, hardboiled gumshoe, whose nose had been beaten crooked
with a blackjack and "one cheekbone was scarred" where "a
hopped-up knife artist" had tried "to carve his initials,"
but behind this face is a brain. And there's even a decidedly
Sherlockian element present in this series. Delaney has his very own
Wiggins.
A newsboy, Bill Smith, who helps him here with proving an alibi.
Delaney tells to the reader that, if ever had a kid, he hoped the
child would have "a full measure of Bill's quickness, loyalty,
born-in-the-bone courage and honesty."
The 3-13 Murders
begins when Ray Vance, a news hawk, phones Delaney from the
brownstone of a prominent member of Chancellor City's upper-crust
society, Fred Tolsi, who has a dead dame in his home with her throat
cut – only problem is that nobody has any idea who she is. Tolsi
claims to have been at the theater at the time of murder and gives
Delaney a two-thousand dollar retainer to get him out of this jam. So
he begins by trying to prove his alibi, but also follows various
leads that bringing him from a low-end, crime-ridden neighborhood,
simply known as the Row, to the thickly wooded hills of the city
limits. Delaney always takes a Yellow Cab.
One of the leads brings
him to a Yogi-ish cult, headed by "The Great I-Give," who
promotes flexibility as a mean to salvation, because Delaney found a
copy of their newspaper, The Prophet, in the brownstone. There
was also a drab-looking woman walking up and down the street to
peddle the newspaper at the time of the murder. Or what about the
fat, yellow-faced man in a long green coat who Delaney bumped into
when he arrived at the home?
However, this merely the
beginning of his problems. Fred Tolsi's elderly neighbor, Mrs. Brant,
is brutally murdered with a shotgun blast to the face and Delaney
gets another client, Helen van Nesst, who hires him to retrieve a
diamond her husband, Sheridan, lost when a card game erupted in a
brawl – most of these leads are directly tied to the criminal
activities in the Row. Fascinatingly, the story is set during a
period when there was a stigma on illegal narcotics even among the
common criminals of the Row. They are terrified of what could happen
to the Row, if the Fed ever gets wind of it.
Naturally, they hardly
allow this possibility to hamper their activities, but Delaney has
become a liability and eventually has to deal with a hired gun from
out of town. A girly-faced hit-man, "The Boston Kid," who has a
final confrontation with the gumshoe that could have been a scene in
a Western.
The 3-13 Murders is,
until the ending, an expertly paced, well-written and characterized,
but fairly regular, hardboiled detective novel. And then Black begins
to unravel the solution to the whole case, layer by layer, which
turned out to be more complex than it appeared on the surface. When I
was trawling the web for background information on Black, I came
across a review of The 3-13 Murders that ended with the advice
to "take a deep breath." Oh, boy, he was not wrong.
The identity of the
murderer took me by complete surprise and one of the murders was
revealed to have been a gimmicky, quasi-impossible crime reminiscent
of John
Rhode. You can even make a case that the first murder was
somewhat of a locked room mystery. There were more clues here than I
have ever seen in a hardboiled novel and that included Pronzini!
So, all things
considered, The 3-13 Murders is one of the finest and
cleverest hardboiled detective novels ever written, which I
recommend, unreservedly, to all. Whether you like the simon-pure
jigsaw-puzzle detective story or the hardboiled narrative of the lone
crusader. You'll get both for the prize of one! So expect it to make
an appearance on my best-of list at the end of the year.
Wow! You dug up a real forgotten gem and made it sparkle. I cannot resist temptation and though I vowed to stop spending money on used books until the autumn I just ordered one of only two copies left for sale on-line. I hope someone didn't beat me to this one. It didn't come up in one search (my go-to site) but did in another. Possibly it was ordered ahead of me via a different website. [...sigh...] Ah well, I'll await the confirmation to see if I lucked out or not.
ReplyDeleteUpdate: Just got the confirmation. A copy pf 3-13 Murders is headed my way. Very happy I acted quickly!
ReplyDeleteBTW, I'm reading a very good semi-tough hardboiled mystery right now and hope to have a review posted in time for April 15, the day federal income taxes are due in the hands of the IRS in our country. Why April 15? The book I'm reading is all about tax law and crime fighting accountants! It's the only book i've ever read that has made taxes exciting for me.
"Wow! You dug up a real forgotten gem and made it sparkle. I cannot resist temptation and though I vowed to stop spending money on used books until the autumn I just ordered one of only two copies left for sale on-line"
DeleteMy job here's done! Since we generally tend to agree with each other, except on supernatural hybrids and gore, I'm confident you'll like The 3-13 Murders. So I hope your copy arrives soon and you don't let us wait too long for your take on it!
"The book I'm reading is all about tax law and crime fighting accountants! It's the only book i've ever read that has made taxes exciting for me."
Sounds like Emma Lathen, a pseudonym of two economists, but did they write semi-though hardboiled novels? Anyway, looking forward to your review of it.
Thanks for the post.
ReplyDeleteA brief mention of Black's Private Eye Al Delaney is included on the great Gumshoe website: Thrilling Detective: http://www.thrillingdetective.com/delaney_al.html
Yes, I linked to that page in my review (see first mention of Delaney).
DeleteI have also placed an order for the book !
ReplyDeleteHope you like it, Santosh!
Delete