"And there's no doubt he has fifteen or twenty pasts; I know that much about him."- Archie Goodwin ("Cordially Invited to Meet Death," collected in Black Orchids, 1941)
Last month, Curt Evans posted a notice on
The Passing Tramp, "Stout Reads: See What Rex Read and How He Rated It,"
informing us there were books for sale once owned by Rex Stout and some were
rated. The highest ranking mystery novel from the lot was George Harmon Coxe's Murder
for Two (1943), which was awarded with an A-minus by Stout and that was
enough to pique my interest.
Jack "Flashgun" Casey is a
journalist/photographer of the hardboiled kind and began his career in a series
of short stories, published in Black Mask, followed by a handful of
novels, radio plays, movies, a TV-series and even a short lived comic book
incarnation – on which Stan Lee was an editor.
Murder for Two begins with Casey returning to the office building of the Express,
after being rejected by the Army on account of a bum knee, when the managing
editor has a surprise for him: he has take Karen Harding, whose father is a
major stockholder in the newspaper, along on assignments to show her the
fieldwork of reporting. And their first stop is Rosalind Taylor. Taylor is a
nationally syndicated writer of columns crusading "against industrialists
who would not co-operate with labor unions, and against the unions themselves
when run by unscrupulous leaders" as the "public champion of the
under-dog" and has had Matt Lawson in her crosshairs for a while. Lawson is
as unscrupulous as they come, but as of late, he has been reinventing himself
as a patriot with war contracts and new inventions like Everflow – a new
compound that makes oils flow at low temperatures. A young man, John Perry, who
was swindled out of his rights by Lawson and, as a bonus, pressed charges
against Perry for assault, invented the compound.
As Rosalind Taylor remarks, "he and
his kind do more to hurt the war effort than any other single class," but
as perfectly cliché as Lawson is for the role of corpse, it's Taylor who's
found inside her own car – shot through the back of her head.
Here's where the pace of the story begins
to pick-up and, while you keep reading, there were portions of the story that
simply went through the motions of a hardboiled detective story. Casey is
struggling through out the book with two musclemen, in pursuit of photographic
evidence snapped by Karen Harding, and they regularly poke a gun in the
photographer's face. Of course, this eventually results in old-fashioned
fisticuffs. The policemen in Murder for Two, Lt. Logan and Sgt. Manahan,
are of the friendly variety, however, search warrants aren't always a necessary
tool of their trade. At one point in the story, Lt. Logan opens a door with a
skeleton key and answers Casey's comment on the obvious illegality of the act
with a dry "so they tell me." If the story had been written today, I'm
sure Logan would've been a suspect on account of a past Taylor column
highlighting his unconstitutional police methods.
I do have some Flashgun Casey around. This review has inspired me to get off my duff and actually get around to reading some.
ReplyDeleteI hope you enjoy 'em!
DeleteEnjoyed reading this. I was pretty mediocre on the first Coxe, but he was quite popular in his heyday, so will keep checking out his work.
ReplyDelete