"Do not freeze it in a block of ice and then stand on it to hang yourself, creating a baffling locked room mystery."- Jon Stewart (on one of the no-no's of the impossible crime genre)
My two-part compendium posts of favorite
locked room mysteries, "The Novels" and "Short Stories," continue to be the
most popular items on this blog and while they could benefit from being rewritten,
I decided to compile another list.
However, there's a slight difference with
this best-of list: it's a compilation of notable examples of locked room
mysteries that managed to be profoundly disappointing or turned out to be dull wastes
of time There are even one or two I consider to be an abomination upon the
genre itself, but let's judge them down from the top.
Gilbert Adair's The Act of Roger
Murgatroyd: An Entertainment (2006)
Keep 'Em Under Lock & Key! |
Cynically promoted as a warm, cozy
send-up of Agatha Christie and the 1930s-style drawing-and locked room mystery,
but the kind of love Adair dishes out to the classical whodunit is that of an abusive
spouse. The book is telling the mystery genre it's has gotten old and fat,
while it pinches it side fat and politely enquires when it plans on finally dying. That's
the story in a nutshell and the locked room (solution) wasn't anything special,
which may have been borrowed from an Edogawa Rampo story. This is the only detective
novel in which I rooted for the killer to take out the detective.
Willy Corsari's De misdaad zonder fouten (The
Faultless Crime, 1927)
The
overconfident title of this debut novel is misleading, because
the plot has more holes than Pablo Escobar on a rooftop in Medellin – which is the reason why I shied away from Willy Corsari for years.
I remember the plot revolving around a man with a broken neck found inside his
locked home, but the story (almost) reads like an anti-detective story as
twins, sleepwalkers and other clichés tag each other in-and out. The final "twist" was just embarrassing.
Joseph
Bowen's The Man Without a Head (1933)
I was
able to find only one redeeming quality in Bowen's sole effort at writing a
mystery novel: he genuinely wanted to write a baffling detective story, in
which the reader could engage the writer, the detective and the criminal in a
battle-of-wits. Unfortunately, the story of the decapitated miser in his
sealed, ramshackle home in a sleepy village in New Mexico was poorly written
and the plot borrowed heavily from the Sherlock Holmes canon. The solution for
the locked front door was routine.
Maurice
B. Dix's Murder at Grassmere Abbey (1934)
This
book was penned and published smack in the middle of the Golden Age of
Detective Fiction, but the plot was swamped in retired tropes, tired-old
clichés and pre-conceived notions non-mystery fans have of 1920s detective
story – shoehorned into one novel. Dix fluffed it all up with some smart aleck
dialogue, but the only fun was figuring out an alternative solution for the
locked room murder of P.C. Brown (which I posted in my review).
Paul
Doherty's The Assassins of Isis (2004)
I love
Paul Doherty as an author of well-written, atmospheric historical novels that
are complemented with a good deal of imagination to provide intrigue for the
mystery aspect of his stories, which often includes an impossible crime.
Dorothy isn't in the same league as John Dickson Carr and Ed Hoch, but they're
usually good enough. The Assassins of Isis is a glaring exception to
this rule: there's an interesting question to be answered how a bag full of
snakes could be smuggled to the General’s rooftop terrace, but I preferred my solution
to this locked room problem to the dull one that was given. However, the
biggest problem is that the book entombs and hides its one good idea better
than the burial site of Tutankhamun. Dorothy can do so much better than this!
Maurice-Bernard
Endrèbe's Elvire a la tour monte (Elvire Climbs the Tower, 1956)
A
slow-moving, talky mystery novel from the "Anthony Boucher of France" starring
Elvire Prentice, "the old lady without mercy," and France's answer to
England's Miss Marple. The scene of the crime is the Tower of London and the
duty of locked doors and latched windows are replaced here with eyewitness
testimonies, which made the false solution psychologically unsound. But it was
still better than the actual solution.
Randall
Garrett's Too Many Magician's (1967)
I loathe
this one! It's horribly over written and the flow of the story is bogged down
in the never-ending stream of personal titles (Milord and Goodfellow) that are
used to end a sentence like a punctuation mark, but on top of that it's one of
the dullest detective stories I have ever read. That's somewhat of an
achievement on its own, considering the story takes place in an alterative
universe loaded with wizards and sword fights with ghosts. The locked room
element, while completely fair, simply wasn't worth the read and it ripped off
John Dickson Carr. Nevertheless, Too Many Magician's still appears on
best-of lists. Baffling!
T.C.H.
Jacobs' Appointment With the Hangman (1935)
Arguably,
the worst mystery novel I have read in 2012 and I say "mystery novel," but what
I meant is a third-rate potboiler that threw everything in the mix it could get
its grubby paws on. Appointment With the Hangman is laden with enticing,
seemingly impossible occurrences, ranging from a talking cat to subduing an
elemental spirit, but the only impossibility with a speck of originality was
the disintegration-trick. On the other hand, the Detection Club should've confiscated
his typewriter and broken his fingers for the levitation-bit.
David
L. Marsh's Dead Box: The "Brown from the Sun" Mysteries (2004)
I can
summarize this entry in one sentence: dried up brain barf scrapped and held
together with a folded soft cover. Harsh? You can try the book for yourself,
because copies are still available and the digital edition is practically free.
You'll still get robbed of a buck and downloading it for free is simply a waste
of bandwidth. So, once again, let the reader be warned!
Rupert
Penny’s Sealed Room Murder (1951)
This entry
will probably evoke cries of sacrilege and pledges to constables to shoot me, but
it's a great example of a clever locked room trick buried in a mediocre novel
and the impossible angle here is hampered by the floor plan – which gave part
of the game away. The final quarter of the book could stand on its own as a
novella, but the build up to the murder is a long, dragging ordeal and the
pay-off isn't worth it in comparison.
A
Room to Die In
(1965) by Ellery Queen is another case of a good locked room trick stranded in
a bad story. And speaking of EQ...
Ellery
Queen's The Door Between (1937)
This
title receives a mention every now and then in best-of lists of locked room-and
impossible crime stories, but there isn't much choice if you insist on having
Ellery Queen on your list and that should explain why this book can make it on such
lists – because there isn't any book from the same period that would make any
list with such an obvious and outdated solution. I remember intensely disliking
the slow, dragging and predictable pace of the story, which shouldn't even make a top-10
list of best EQ novels. The severely altered, somewhat hockey rewrite, entitled
The Vanishing Corpse (1941), was so much better and far more entertaining
than the original. There even was a reason for the race with a stolen
ambulance!
Frederick
Ramsay's Stranger Room (2009)
The
first 20-30 pages bristled with promise as the author presents the reader with
two locked room murders, one from 150 years ago, but that was apparently all
the plot the book required and Ramsay proceeded to flesh out the characters
inhabiting the backwater in which the story takes place. I hated all of them! Worst
of all, the shift in focus came after Ramsay flung the telltale clue (pretty much
the solution) to both locked rooms at the reader. As if saying, "enough of this
silly plotting business for one book." I mean, how could you not notice the significance and
potential of that particular item in a locked room mystery?! Good idea, but horribly
executed. Did I mention I hated every single character from this book?
Clayton
Rawson's No Coffin for the Corpse (1942)
Admittedly,
the first half began promising enough when an attempt at blackmail ends in
murder and a dead man rises from his improvised grave to extract revenge, but
when the ghost apparently commits a murder and vanishes from a locked-and
guarded room the story begins to loose its memento – noticeably so! If an
author has to stop the story in order to pull the reader back in with a lecture
on fakirs, you might want to ease off on the carnival-stuff just a little bit. It’s
like saying to the reader, “now wait, hear me out! This is actually possible.”
The solution for the locked room wasn't much better. It only makes you wonder
why Rawson made it an impossible crime story in the first place: for the sake
of discussing and theorizing about them?
Well, that's the first (real) filler post in a long time and I hope to be back soon with a regular review.
Some of these books I own but have yet to read (eg., the one by Clayton Rawson). I will likely try reading them, but not one after the other. Some have actually been recommended by others in the past, a reflection of differences in taste or expectations, I suppose (Stranger Room, for instance.) What might be more interesting for your readers: a list of locked room and impossible crime stories that didn't make your top drawer list, but are still worthy of honorable mention.
ReplyDeleteWell, there are already a few honorary mentions on the list (e.g. Joseph B. Carr's The Man With Bated Breath and Lou Cameron's Behind the Scarlet Door), but I guess I could split the list when I decide to finally update it.
DeleteWell, I've only read the Rawson and Queen titles here and have the Garrett on the shelf but none of the others. I remember liking the Queen book quite a lot at the time, for all its obvious faults, and may even have the read the 1941 movie novelisation actually, but can;t remember hmmm - I'll probably stay clear of the other you list though!
ReplyDelete