"Philately... is a curious hobby. It seems to afflict its victims with a species of mania. I don't doubt these stamp-collecting fellows would murder each other for one of the things."- Ellery Queen (Ellery Queen's "The Adventure of the One-Penny Black," collected in The Adventures of Ellery Queen, 1933-34)
Harriette
Ashbrook, who also wrote under the penname of "Susannah Shane," was an
American mystery novelist from the genre's Golden Era, but one who was,
reportedly, overlooked, forgotten and overshadowed when she was still plying
her trade – which makes her output one of the more neglected nooks in the
genre. It must have been a glumly, unprofitable honor for Ashbrook, but we get
to explore an author a large swath of mystery readers in the 1930s missed out
on. That's one of the perks of ferociously consuming detective fiction in the 21st
century.
Anyhow, the page for Ashbrook on the Golden Age of Detection Wiki says
she "was never taken seriously in the mystery arena." She never garnered
any of favorably reviews, which led to her being ignored by leading paperback
houses, but there's been one modern critic who spoke kindly about her work in
the field – John Norris from Pretty
Sinister Books. Well, that's a good enough endorsement for me!
John notes in her Wiki article how her
early books "show an obvious love for the genre" with lively characters,
realistic detection, insight into forensic police work and a smart-aleck
playboy detective "who is much more interesting and funny than Philo Vance."
Her later books, which were published under the name of "Susannah Shane,"
warranted a "comparison with Alice
Tilton and Craig
Rice," but the plots "often surpass the story mechanics of those two
better known writers." You can find a closer examination of some of those
plots in an insightful blog-post, The
Detective Novels of Harriette Ashbrook, which had some encouraging words
for A Most Immoral Murder (1935) and again mentions how the detective
was "one of the better Vance impersonators" – something I have to agree
with.
A Most Immoral Murder was originally published as He Killed a Thousand Men in the
July 1935 issue of Mystery Magazine, which was a periodical that was
exclusively sold in Woolworth stores. Later in that same year, it was published
as a proper book and began its long, undeserved descend into obscurity.
We find the detective of this forgotten
series, Philip "Spike" Tracy, in a similar mood as Sherlock Holmes in "The
Adventure of the Bruce-Partington Plans," collected in His Last Bow: Some
Reminiscences of Sherlock Holmes (1917), which is in a state of complete
and utter boredom. Spike has engaged the services of a battered prize-fighter
to act as a Wodehousean butler and combat the tediousness of everyday life, but
the monotonous spell is only broken when Pug Beasley answers the door to find
drenched, wild and haggardly looking woman on the doorstep – who promptly
collapses and is put to bed immediately.
The woman turns out to be Linda Crossley
and the police are very interested in her whereabouts, because she has been
missing ever since her grandfather was found hunched over a desk in his private
library. A dark stain on his back proved to be blood from a deep stab wound.
Prentice Crossley was an avaricious
collector of rare and desirable stamps, whose collection was worth a queen’s
ransom, but were they worth enough to someone to kill over? Apparently, that
appears to be the case, because "more than $85,000 worth of stamps are
missing" from the collection. Amazingly, that prize-tag represents the
combined value of only a handful of stamps! There's also a string of
interesting snippets of background material on stamp collecting and the history
of stamps, such as "howlers," which are "stamps with crazy mistakes in them" like "ships with their
flag blowing against the wind." So I probably learned something from this
book.
However, it's not just the philatelic
element and the presence of collectors that firmly plants the book in the Van Dine-Queen School of Detection, but
also the fact that Spike Tracy is the younger brother of the District Attorney –
which provides him with access to the crime-scene and detailed information on
the case. You can compare this to the father-and-son team of Ellery
Queen and Inspector Richard Queen or a similar combination of siblings from
Amelia Reynolds Long's Death
Has a Will (1944), in which a lawyer, by the name of Stephen Carter, assists
his brother, Jeff Carter, who's a District Attorney.
It's the combination of Spike, his
brother and Inspector Herschman, "head of the homicide squad," who take
a closer look at the small group of people who surrounded the victim in life,
which includes his lawyer, John Fairleigh, a dealer, named Kurt Koenig, Jason
Fream of the Acme Stamp Company and Homer Watson – who was "known in
philatelic circles as a keen rival of Crossley." But another element is
introduced to the story when the murderer strikes a second time.
An elderly woman, Mrs. Deborah Ealing, is
found stabbed to death in her apartment. The weapon is a bayonet and identified
by her daughter, Maysie Ealing, as a war souvenir from her long-lost brother, who
never returned from the war, but what tied both crimes together is a rare stamp
in the dead woman's hand. However, this new element has to do with the long
shadow cast by the events in the First World War and how it affected those who
fought in its trenches, but, in combination with the stamp business, it
provided a surprisingly original and interesting motive for a double murder. I
could not think of a similarly motivated detective novel from the Golden Age.
The only problem is that, while you can
figure out the identity of the murderer, gauging this characters original piece
of motivation is a lot harder, but I find that a forgivable offense – in this
particular case anyway. I had a much bigger problem with the colossal and
cosmic coincidence that, from all the houses, Linda Crossley accidentally stumbled
into the humble abode of Spike Tracy. Or how Spike covered up the murders. I
can understand the sympathy one might feel towards this murderer and understand
this persons motivation, but is it really an excuse to plunge a bayonet in the
back of an old lady?
Anyway, I was still impressed how
Ashbrook linked the horrifying ordeals suffered in the trenches to such an
innocent hobby as stamp collecting, an old photograph, a newspaper
advertisement and a family secret, which made for an interesting and original
mystery. I have mentioned in the past how detective stories closely tied to the
World Wars hold my interest, but tales in which the Great War has a strong
presence are very sparse in comparison to the World War II era mysteries. The
only other example I can think of, in which the First World War has such a
presence as in A Most Immoral Murder, is Was
it Murder? (1931) by James Hilton.
She did indeed get the short stick! Amazingly, for a minor mystery writer one of her books, The Murder of Stephen Kester, was adapted for the screen only a year after it was published. The title changed to Green Eyes and its fairly faithful though a bit more madcap than the novel. I can find something to admire in all of her books even if some of them have easy to spot murderers. She really did admire the genre and was quite a "fanboy" when she encountered originality as I discovered in the few mystery book reviews she wrote for newspapers. Finding them online is almost impossible, but I was successful at the library. At the time, I think she was pretty innovative for an American detective novelist. She did some very interesting research for at least two of her books. I've got another long essay planned on her books she wrote as Susannah Shane in which persona she did some interesting Woolrichian suspense plotting. Last year I managed to find copies of three of her rarest titles. Of the total six Shane books I've got only three more to read. That essay should be coming in April on my blog.
ReplyDeleteThere were one or two passages, with commentary about the detective story, showing her credentials as a genre "fanboy." So on that account alone she deserved more than she got, but she also showed some genuine originality here. Loved how she wove the stamps and WWI-angle into a detective-plot. Yes, she deserved more than she got.
DeleteAnyhow, looking forward to your essay.
Guess I'll end this review here and recommend A Most Immoral Murder to fans of S.S. van Dine, Ellery Queen and Clyde Clason. If you enjoyed those writers, you'll enjoy Ashbrook.
ReplyDeleteIf she's worthy to be compared to those three writers I might definitely have to start looking for some of her books.
I can't vouch for any of her other books, but this was one was unmistakably from the Van Dine-Queen-Clason School of American Detective Fiction and I loved it!
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