"Any truth is better than indefinite doubt."- Sherlock Holmes ("The Yellow Face," from The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes, 1893)
I've been
cranking out reviews and filler posts on a semi-regular basis for over four
years and received around a dozen offers over that period to accept review
copies, which I all turned down. The kind gestures from these publishers were
appreciated, but you'll need a smooth talking conman to even make me consider
touching a contemporary thriller or something reeking of neo-noir.
Last week, a
new and independent publisher, Dean
Street Press, was kind enough to send me two e-books that fitted this niche
corner perfectly, The Studio Crime (1929) and Dead Man's Quarry
(1930) by Ianthe
Jerrold, which feature an introduction by Curt Evans – who's still far
ahead of me on this trail of obscurity.
The synopsis
and introduction for The Studio Crime is what grabbed my attention and
immediately tossed it on the top of the pile. I did "see certain
resemblances to Golden Age murder master John
Dickson Carr" in the plot summery. How could I resist?
The Studio
Crime begins on "a foggy night," as a small
party is gathering in the lower floor, studio apartment of Laurence Newtree,
where the thick fog inspires the guests to discuss murder and the psychology of
its perpetrators. One of them remarks, "it's a bad night for most things,"
but "a good night for crime." Someone agreed.
Gordon Frew is
the upstairs neighbor of Newtree, a collector of oriental rugs and bronze
statues, who expected the party to drop by later that evening, but doesn't
respond to their knocking. The tightly closed front door is partially
demolished to discover Frew slumped over his writing table, garbed in a
dressing gown, with a brass knife-handle protruding from between his shoulder
blades. There is a back window, wide open, with a drop of several feet on top
of a sloping roof of an outhouse, which throws the concept of a locked room
mystery out of the window. However, I'll get back to this point in a moment.
Detective-Inspector
Hembrow of Scotland Yard is put on the case and finds among the party guests an
old friend and ally, John Christmas, who assisted him on several previous
investigations such as "the extraordinary affair known as the Museum murder"
– in which a journalist was found murdered in the reading room of British
Museum. The names of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson are evoked more than once,
but I found Christmas and Hembrow very reminiscent of the good natured, woolgathering
amateur and the more fact-based, Man of the Yard from the Anthony
Berkeley mold. But Christmas said it better:
"I am afraid my methods are not what Hembrow would call sound. The sound detective collects facts and deduces his theory from them. I prefer to create a theory out of the broad characteristics of the case, and then test the facts to see if they support my theory. If they don't, of course the theory falls to ground; and if no other rises from the ruins to take its place, I have to give the affair up as hopeless."
Well, there's
an abundance of odd characteristics and seemingly conflicting facts to build
multiple theories around, which should keep any armchair detective as occupied
as Christmas. First of all, there were the peculiar encounters in the fog with
a mysterious man in a fez. You have to wonder if this aspect of the plot
influenced John Dickson Carr when he wrote The
Arabian Nights Murder (1936) and The
Punch and Judy Murders (1937). Secondly, there's a large network of
hidden, cross-relationship between the victim and many of the suspects, from a
ghost writer to the owners of a rundown antique shop, surrounded with a
smorgasbord of 1920s tropes: wills, pieces of papers, lost handkerchief, etc.
However,
Jerrold's writing and characterization lifted The Studio Crime well
above the average detective yarn from that period, but I just have one problem
with the solution – which has to do with the locked front door. Mild spoilers
ahead!
The final
twist implies the murder of Gordon Frew was an impossible crime, but it was
never explained how one of the people involved was able to walk out of the
studio and leave the door locked from the inside. I read the book over several
days and thought I might have missed or forgotten something, went back and
forth. Searched for keywords and reread some parts, but I can’t find it. The
door was definitely locked from the inside and it was Christmas who opened it: "...Christmas
who, with his arm through the door, turned the key in the lock with a sharp
click." So how did that one person manage to leave the room and leave the
key on the inside of the door in lock-position?
Well, let's end this lukewarm review here, but I'll get back Dead Man's Quarry before long and that one doesn't include an impossible crime for me to get disappointed over, if it isn't properly handled.