Theodore
Mathieson was an American schoolteacher from Oregon, who taught in
the public high schools of California, but turned to writing during
the late 1950s and published a number of novels, which include the
historical mystery The Devil and Ben Franklin (1961) and two
juvenile detectives featuring The Sleuth Club – entitled The
Door to Nowhere (1964) and The
Sign of the Flame (1964). So those titles have been jotted
down for my future explorations of the juvenile
mystery genre.
Mathieson
also penned a score of short stories that were published in Alfred
Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine and Ellery Queen's Mystery
Magazine. The first of these short stories, "Captain Cook,
Detective," spawned a twelve-part series of historical standalone
stories starring famous figures from history as detective. Galileo,
Alexander the Great, Hernando Cortez, Alexandre Dumas and Florence
Nightingale were all fitted with a caped mantle and deerstalker hat
by Mathieson.
The
most-well known and frequently anthologized story from this "Great
Detectives" series is "Leonardo da Vinci, Detective,"
originally published in the January, 1959, issue of EQMM, in
which Da Vinci is tasked with finding an explanation for an
impossible murder – committed in front of witnesses by an
apparently invisible killer. John Norris, of Pretty
Sinister Books, recently reviewed The
Devil and Ben Franklin and mentioned that this short story
was described Mike Ashley, a prolific anthologist, as "one of
the most ingenious" of the series with "its step-by-step
unravelling of a seemingly impossible crime." So I decided to
take down one of the anthologies with this story and see how good
this story really is.
I
read "Leonardo da Vinci, Detective" in Ashley's The Mammoth
Book of Historical Whodunnits (1993) and takes place on a late
spring afternoon in 1516 when Da Vinci, now in his sixties, has left
Florence to life in France.
Da
Vinci is in the favor of the King of France, Francis I, but "the
regal French beauty," the Queen, has never liked him. One
afternoon, Da Vinci is sketching in a rose garden when a messenger
from the Queen summons him to come to Amboise at once. Da Vinci is
brought to an amphitheater where "a fine demonstration of
marching formations" by "troops from the Netherlands, from
Spain, and from Scotland," but, as the exhibition closed,
Monsieur Philip Laurier, approached the empty center of the field –
to blow a trumpet signaling the end. But when he began to raise his
trumpet to his lips, Laurier began to stagger and crumple.
The
witnesses who saw this happen caught the glimpse of a knife-hilt as
he dropped to the ground, but "the knife could only have been
thrown by someone standing at the level of the arena floor."
Philip was the only one who stood in the empty arena! Queen is very
anxious that this problem is solved as soon as possible.
I
think "Leonardo da Vinci, Detective" is better written than
plotted. Not that the plot was bad, not at all, but the clues were
clumsily handled. Mathieson deserves praise for sticking to the
principle of fair play and placed as many as the short story form
would allow in the hands of the reader. However, they all stuck out
like rusty nails. Norris has criticized
John
Russell Fearn's clues tend to stick out like sore thumbs, but,
compared to this story, Fearn has the subtlety of John
Dickson Carr. I initially felt underwhelmed by the explanation
for the invisible murderer until thinking about it a little more. The
trick gels perfectly with the military background and the period in
which the story is set works like a red herring, because the
principle idea behind the impossible stabbing is associated with
modern warfare. A similar piece of out-of-time misdirection was
cleverly used by Carr in Fire,
Burn! (1957). I needed some convincing, but ended up liking
the impossible crime trick.
So,
all things considered, this was not a bad story at all, either as a
historical mystery or an impossible crime story, but the clumsily
handling of the clues keeps this one from a first place.
Nevertheless, I find it surprising that this often anthologized story
never found its way in any of the specialized locked room
anthologies. The detective, plot and setting are certainly original
enough to be included in a line-up.
Anyway,
my next post is going further back into the post when I'll be looking
another of Paul
Doherty's historical locked room mysteries. It's like the best of
two worlds!
My insidious influence strikes again. Just goes to show that hyperbolic praise is as subjective as ever. You ought to have been prepared for less than stellar detective work despite Ashley's rave. I did say that the detective work in the novel was uneven, sloppy, and often unfair. Still it's nice to see Mathieson's other work being read and written up. He definitely was a talented storyteller based solely on the novel I read.
ReplyDelete"You ought to have been prepared for less than stellar detective work... I did say that the detective work in the novel was uneven, sloppy, and often unfair."
DeleteVery true. But some writers are better in short story form. So I hoped Ashley was right.
I wonder if all these stories were ever collected.
ReplyDeleteThe stories were collected under the title The Great Detectives in 1960.
Delete