"The fury of a demon instantly possessed me. I knew myself no longer. My original soul seemed, at once, to take its flight from my body; and a more than fiendish malevolence... thrilled every fiber of my frame."- Edgar Allan Poe ("The Black Cat," first published The Saturday Evening Post, 1843)
In recent weeks, I've been exploring the
works of Robin
Forsythe, an ex-convict-turned-writer, who completed his first mystery
novel, Missing or Murdered (1929), while serving a term of imprisonment
for defrauding the British government. Seven additional novels would follow
before he passed away in 1937.
Forsythe was born in 1879 and you can catch
an occasional glimpse of the ghosts of the sort of crime-fiction he probably
read during his formative years in the waning days of the nineteenth century,
but they're compelled to obey the rules and conventions of the Golden Age – as
well as sharing that era's deep appreciation for clever and ingenious schemes.
The large-scale plots encircling the inexplicable death of Mrs. Mesado in The
Pleasure Cruise Mystery (1933) and the extraordinary pair of corpses in
The
Spirit Murder Mystery (1936) can attest to that claim.
The Ginger Cat Mystery (1935) was the fourth entry in the Anthony "Algernon" Vereker
series and published in the United States as Murder at Marston Manor,
which turned out to be far more accurate book-title. Granted, the second title
is a bit dull and unimaginative, but spot-on as Forsythe strayed down a winding
path that lead straight to a manor house mystery in the grand old English
tradition.
A small village, Marston-le-Willows, in
West Suffolk is the backdrop of The Ginger Cat Mystery and the
home-county of Mr. John Cornell, who moved to London as a teenager and accrued
a considerable fortune as a merchant, which allowed him to retire at sixty and
buy Marston Manor – where he planned to settle for "the remainder of his
days" in "peace and seclusion." However, the peace-part is not to be
taken as a synonym for a sedentary life.
John Cornell became a widower in the
years preceding his retirement and "his frozen sedateness" began to thaw "in the autumn sunshine of his years," which simply translated to having "a high old time." He began to wear brighter clothes, attended opera and
theatre performances, frequented nightclubs and acquired a sumptuous houseboat
– which he renamed from "Mayfly" to "Mayfly But Can't." Naturally, this
rejuvenation cumulated in a marriage with a much, much younger woman.
Josephine Rivron is a friend of Cornell's
son, Frank, who, according to local gossip, was "in an unseemly hurry"
to get her hands "on the loaded Cornell coffers," because she gave the
son a pass and married the old man instead. Regardless, the marriage appeared
as a happy one, but tragedy pried them apart: Cornell fell ill and passed away
due to pneumonia. There are, however, whispered rumors implying Cornell's
unexpected passing was due to poisoning and this lead to an "exhumation by
lamplight," but the results were profoundly disenchanting to the village
rumor-mill. But then a bone-fide murder occurs!
One early morning, the body of Frank
Cornell was found on the half-landing of a staircase leading to the first floor
of Marston Manor: he had been shot through the right eye.
This brings Inspector Heather and Anthony "Algernon" Vereker to the scene of the crime, which is where the book begins to
differ from the other ones I have read. In the previous books, the dialogue
between Vereker and Manuel Ricardo resulted in a flippant and quippish
narrative, but the latter is largely absent from the story – giving the overall
story a different and more serious dynamic. Vereker spends most of his time
interviewing suspects and poking around the crime-scene, which squarely places
the book in the "mainly conversation" category and somewhat of a disaster to
review. However, my poorly written review should not reflect badly on the book.
I very much enjoyed it as a pure, if slowly moving, detective story, but one
that's hard to sum-up without giving too much away – which is why this
blog-post is horribly overwritten (i.e. padding) without as much as a glance at
the plot and characters.
However, I'll say this about The
Ginger Cat Mystery: one of the strongest and weakest aspects of the plot is
its dedication to fair play, which sounds contradictory, but allow me to
explain. Halfway through the story, I had one of those moments that convince me
that I'm brilliant armchair detective stuck in the wrong universe. All the
pieces of the puzzle fell into place: a supposedly haunted music room, a
missing set of duplicate keys, a vest pocket automatic pistol and a conspicuous
groove on the bullet. I knew who the murderer was, how the murder was carried
out and why, but the problem was that I still had half a book to go through.
I don't know if it was because I had
figured everything out by the halfway mark, but I spotted the final twist from
a mile away and "the clue of the ginger tabby," in combination with the
false explanation, cemented my conviction that I was 100% spot-on with my
solution. Well, I was right.
So, all in all, a clever constructed and
fairly original detective story that plays scrupulously fair with the reader,
but the plot was dressed in a plain and conventional suit, which may be the
only serious drawback to a mystery novel that has the name of Robin Forsythe
emblazoned on its cover.
Thanks for the review - having read, and enjoyed, 'Polo Ground Mystery', I'm glad to see so many Forsythe reviews appear. :)
ReplyDeleteI think I feel slightly disappointed by what I've read so far regarding 'Spirit Murder Mystery' and 'Ginger Cat Mystery', insofar as I thought 'Polo Ground Mystery' boasted of a good puzzle for a second novel - and I was expecting was Forsythe to move from strength to strength. But it seems like only 'Pleasure Cruise Mystery' managed to score better in terms of crafting a clever mystery.
You've to keep in mind that the fluctuation of quality bounces between merely good and excellent, which is quite an accomplishment. Forsythe appears to have been genuinely incapable of delivering a thoroughly bad and rotten mystery novel. Which is why I keep coming back to Forsythe every other novel.
DeleteI would not be to disappointed about some of the nitpicking in my reviews of The Ginger Cat Mystery and The Spirit Murder Mystery, because they're finely crafted detective stories with original aspects in their solutions. One of the main objections to Spirit was that the apparent supernatural events were explained away with a very old and dated plot-device, but that was only one aspect to the overall plot.