"This is too strange for school, Hadji."- Jonny Quest (East of Zanzibar)
One of
the umpteen entries in Robert Adey's Locked Room Murders and Other
Impossible Crimes (1991) that caught my interest was R.H.W. Dillard's The
Book of Changes (1974), which has a problem of the impossible variety that
is described as follow: "death of a man inside a locked room that could only
be locked from the outside, yet the sole key was in the victims stomach."
A brief
search on the web revealed that the book is still available in paperback, a
2001 reprint from the Louisiana State University Press, but this good news was accompanied
with a sobering and off-putting review – calling the book "pointless
experimentation" and "potsmoke prose, accompanied with babygoo beatifics."
I was still intrigued though and bumped the book up my list of priorities, but
now I have to review a story as disjointed as a recently unearthed skeleton.
To
understand this, I can easily place this book in the canon of the genre
alongside Virgil Markham's Death in the Dusk (1928), Joel Townsley Rogers' The Red Right Hand (1945) and Fredric Brown's Night of the
Jabberwock (1950), stories with either a nightmarish or dreamlike quality
that ditch realism at the side of the road and string together a series of
often episodic events that defy common sense, and Dillard goes all out in The
Book of Changes! The stories switches from scene to scene, era to era and
from characters to characters and none of them seem to make much sense. One of
the persons we follow around, throughout many decades, is the consulting
detective Sir Hugh Fitz-Hyffen, a distorted, funhouse mirror reflection of
Sherlock Holmes, whose cases lead him from the home of an English matriarch,
after a number of the local women turned up dead and a wolf is seen dancing on
its hind legs, to Chicago where a Zodiac killer stalks its citizens and a
man turns up dead in a locked room.
Regrettably,
Fitz-Hyffen's cases are more anti-detective stories than proper mysteries and readers
like yours truly should expect not much from them. The explanation for the problem of the locked door
was even more disappointing than venomous animals, secret passageways or
another Isreal Zangwill rip-off – while another, simple but elegant, solution
presented itself based on the evidence given in the story. According to the
pathologist, who dug the key from the victims innards, it was acid bitten and
might not have properly worked if they tried the lock. Dillard could have easily
made that key a false one, while the murderer used the actual key to lock the
door.
The
episodes set on a street named Life, where the moral fabric is slowly
disintegrating, were, perhaps, my favorite segments in this book and showed
that Dillard had more than just a nodding acquaintance with the genre. Inhabitants
of Life includes, alongside Oscar Wilde, a pair of twin brothers, separated at
birth, named Leslie Ford and David Frome, and a couple who listen to the names
of Michael Venning and Daphne Sanders. Everyone can come across as genresavy by
referencing Sherlock Holmes, Conan Doyle and Sgt. Cuff, but I bet those four names
would go over a lot of readers heads nowadays. Oh, and did I mention this weird
plot also involves The Moonstone and the Mask of Fu-Manchu? Both of them nicked.
So I can only recommend this if you’re in the mood for something goofy.