"Different policemen have different methods..."- Morse (Inspector Morse, Episode S05-E01: Second Time Around, 1991)
The professional career of Sir
Basil Thomson was as rich and varied as a vividly colored, intricately
patterned tapestry and its textural richness included such snapshots as stints
as a colonial officer, prison governor, intelligence officer, Assistant
Commissioner at Scotland Yard and working alongside the Prime Minister of Tonga
– according to some "he was the Prime Minister of Tonga." During
his time on these jobs, he was a thorn in the side of the suffragettes, spies
from Imperial Germany, Irish nationalists and British Marxists.
So with such a résumé, we can be forgiven
for not remembering Thomson was also one of the pioneering minds of the English
police
procedural during the detective story's Golden Age.
Fortunately, the Dean Street Press is in the process of
filling this gaping lacuna in our collective memory by reissuing all of
Thomson's police novels about Inspector Richardson, which tell the story of a
Scottish policeman "climbing through the ranks of Scotland Yard." All of
these eight books are clad in softly colored, uniformly designed book covers
and are introduced by an accomplished crime novelist and genre historian, Martin Edwards. You
can read more about Thomson's fascinating life in Edwards' introduction, which
includes interrogation of Mata Hari, Roger Casement and a sensational conviction
for "an offense of indecency" in Hyde Park – resulting in a fine of five
pounds! But lets move on to the first book in a series that was praised by Dorothy
L. Sayers, Jacques Barzun and Wendell H. Taylor.
Richardson's First Case (1933) begins on a wet, misty and depressing November afternoon in
Baker Street where a young policeman, P.C. Richardson, is standing at his post.
The "stream of traffic" had "splashed him with mud to his knees,"
his waterproof cape glistened with moisture and he "was wondering how he
could win admission to the Criminal Investigation Department," but even he
would probably have been surprised if he knew the traffic accident he was about
to witness would offer him an escape from the humdrum routine of the uniformed
police constable.
An old man, who "dashed across as if
the devil was after him," got blindsided by a car and looked like "a
bundle of old clothes" entangled with "the spring and the front axle."
One of the witnesses on the pavement heard him say, "very well, then, I'll
call a policeman," before dashing off, which complicated an apparent simple
traffic accident – nor would it be the last complication in the case.
The name of the victim, who died on his
way to the hospital, was John Catchpool. He was a registered moneylender and a
shopkeeper of an antique store, who "had many other irons in the fire,"
but what they find in his store completely convoluted the whole matter.
What they found inside the store of the
old man is the body of his wife, Mrs. Catchpool, who was strangled to death and
the problem that arises from this discovery is a decidedly classical one. John
Catchpool has a will that leaves everything to his wife and her beneficiary is
a nephew, a naval officer called Lieutenant Sharp, but if his wife died before
he did everything would go to his nephew upon his death – a man by the name of
Herbert Reece. So the will provides both cousins with a potential motive for
murder and asks the question of who died first, but there are more suspects to
consider.
Sir Basil Thomson (1861-1939) |
Richardson found a slip of paper in the
clothes of Catchpool, which bore the name and address of Arthur Harris, "a
thin, weedy kind of youth," who has a fondness for drinking and reckless
driving. Harris initially denies even the slightest acquaintance with
Catchpool, but the old moneylender's ledger shows an entry in Harris' name for
an outstanding loan of two hundred pounds. A second, potential suspect from the
outside comes in the guise of a shivering, broken-down wreck of a man, named
Frank Cronin, who's an artist and a picture-cleaner who illegally pawned an
interesting picture that he was supposed to clean. The picture depicts a bunch
of "licentious Spanish soldiers," during the occupation of the Low
Countries, murdering and raping "the virtuous Dutchmen in the village" –
which is burning down in the background. I wager it's a depiction of the Siege
of Oudewater, but that’s a side observation.
So there's enough to investigate for the
police, but where Thomson's crime-fiction differed from his contemporaries is
the emphasis on teamwork and police procedural. As Edwards pointed out in the
introduction, "such as focus on police team-working is very familiar to
present day crime fiction fans," but it was a fresh and novel approach to
the detective story in the 1930s. I have read about James
Oliver Curwood who wrote books about the Mounted Police in the Canada of
the 19th century, which reputedly blends elements of the police procedural with
tracking-type of adventure/mystery stories in frozen, untamed lands. However,
the comparisons seem superficial. Craig Rice had her detectives operate as a team,
but they were amateurs from the forties with no regards for proper procedure
and rules. So Thomson really was an innovative writer during the thirties,
because this type of crime-fiction would not gain traction until the 1950s when
such writers as Ed
McBain began to carve a name for themselves.
I really found it interesting to see a
series characters from a Golden Age police series start out as uniformed
constable, pounding pavement, who slowly begins his rise in the ranks and is
told by his superior to "apply for the plain-clothes allowance."
Retrospectively, it seems so logical to use a police force as a series "character," but it goes to show how strong a precedent Auguste Dupin and
Sherlock Holmes were for the genre.
I've one complaint to make about Richardson's
First Case, which concerns the rather abrupt ending to the investigation.
Richardson arrested the murderer and found a key-piece of evidence in the
murderer's possession that this person was conveniently carrying around. The
explanation also made a lot of the interesting plot-threads inconsequential to
the actual solution, which was disappointing, but, as a whole, the book was
very interesting – especially as a predecessor of the modern police procedural.
Thanks for the review. This one sounds very interesting. It is interesting to note that E. R. Punshon's Bobby Owen series, which also followed the plan of tracing Owen's career up through the ranks throughout the series, started in the same year of 1933. According to Twentieth-Century Crime and Mystery Writers, Thomson's first book appeared in 1896.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome and good observation about Punshon's Bobby Owen! The book you're referring to is Court Intrigue, but the pre-Richardson book that seems most interesting is Mr. Pepper, Investigator.
DeleteIt's a collection of short stories and one of them, "The Vanishing of Mrs. Fraser," inspired one of Carr's most famous radio plays, "Cabin B-13." So hopefully that one will get reissued as well.
Really learned something new today TC, just not an author on my radar until now - thanks mate!
ReplyDeleteThomson wasn't on my radar until few days ago. So it was an interesting discovery.
DeleteA completely new one to me, too - many thanks to you and DSP, will keep an eye on these...
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, JJ.
DeleteJust finished reading this book yesterday and I think we have a similar take on it. I have also read The Grell Mystery which Harper Collins reprinted last year. Though as my review suggests I had a few issues with the central police detective and with the ending:
ReplyDeletehttps://crossexaminingcrime.wordpress.com/2015/11/15/the-grell-mystery-1913-by-frank-froest-a-detective-with-a-hero-complex/
I would definitely say Richardson's First Case is a better.
Thanks for the review, Kate. I'm still curious about the Froest and his book, which has now officially been added to my wish list/TBR-pile.
Delete