A strange,
but fascinating, passageway in the locked room-and impossible crime
genre is a dark, grimy alley that opens onto those mean streets of
Sam Spade, Philip Marlowe and Lew Archer. A narrow passage connecting
the cerebral detective story with the world of the tough, gruff and
grizzled private dicks with the locked room puzzle serving as a
linchpin between the traditional and hardboiled styles – an
unlikely combination that can be magical when done right. Bill
Pronzini's Hoodwink
(1981), Scattershot
(1982) and Bones
(1985) are perfect examples of blending hardboiled story-telling with
a puzzling impossible crime plot.
Thrilling
Detective Website has a whole page dedicated to these cross-genre
composites, "And
Throw Away the Key! Locked Room P.I. Mysteries," listing such
titles as Jonathan Latimer's Headed
for a Hearse (1935), Roman McDougald's The
Blushing Monkey (1953) and Tucker Coe's Murder
Among Children (1967).
There are,
however, some (notable) omissions like Anthony Boucher's The
Case of the Solid Key (1941), Manly Wade Wellman's Find
My Killer (1947), Fredric Brown's Death
Has Many Doors (1951), Stephen Mertz's Some
Die Hard (1979) and Pronzini's Schemers
(2009). Recently, I found another little-known title that enjoys an
equal amount of obscurity as both a locked room and hardboiled P.I.
novel, but deserved some kind of recognition. More so as a dark,
gritty, but well-written, crime novel than as an impossible crime
story.
James L.
Nusser penned a handful of private-eye novels during the 1980s,
published as by "Jack
Livingston," starring a stone-deaf detective, Joe Binney, who
lost his hearing during the Korean War when a placed a shaped charge
on an enemy gunboat with a "delay fuse that didn't delay"
– practically turning his skull inside out. Binney was patched up
at a Navy hospital where he learned lip reading and bookkeeping. So
he could work as a free-lance bookkeeper and wouldn't have to talk to
anybody, but, when he "chased down a few skips and swindlers"
for his clients, Binney began to work as a private detective.
Die Again,
Macready (1984) is the second of only four titles in this series
and was listed by Robert Adey in Locked Room Mysteries (1991).
Adey summed
Die Again, Macready as a "perfectly reasonable
private-eye yarn" written by an author who, for some reason, "does not seem to command the attention of a lot of his peers"
and appears to be largely forgotten today. And very little can be
found about him online. Nonetheless, the introduction of a deaf,
lipreading private-eye appeared to have made somewhat of a splash at
the time. I think this one is as good as any I have read by the likes
of Latimer and Pronzini.
Joe Binney is
hired by a rising actor, William Macready, to track down his business
manager, Arnold Pelfrey, who "absconded with about two-hundred
and fifty thousand dollars" of employers money and the trail
leads to a seedy, rundown Times Square hotel – where he finds
Pelfrey hanging from an ancient gas pipe. The door of the room had
been locked, as well as bolted, from the inside and the closed window "hadn't been dusted in centuries." So everything appears
to point towards suicide, but the problem of the locked hotel room is
only a minor part of the overall plot. Binney wastes no time in
explaining how the murderer locked and bolted the door from the
inside with an old, shopworn trick ("the impossible takes a
little longer, but locked-room puzzles we solve immediately, sir,
compliments of Joe Binney, Esq., Private Investigations at your
service."). So this is only a very minor impossible crime
novel. However, the story has more to offer than just a simplistic
locked room puzzle.
The next
couple of chapters are actually some of the best in the book as
Binney, according to the tradition of the hardboiled crime novel,
finds himself on the receiving end of a beating.
A beating
that leaves him with partial amnesia and has to convalescence at the
home of his client, Macready, who lives in a penthouse situated in a
bad neighborhood and they have some interesting conversations –
talking about how they had overcome their wartime injuries and "the
TV racket." An important plot-thread in the story is why
Macready turned down an important role in a new TV-series, which is
neatly tied to the problem of the stolen and now missing money. And I
wonder if the unnamed TV network here happened to be the same one
from William
DeAndrea's Matt Cobb series. I like to think so.
But these
chapters also have a really strange, comic book vibe to them
recalling Daredevil and Watchmen. A part of the story
takes place in Hell's Kitchen, "a screwy part of the world,"
which Binney described as "becoming more like Hell itself."
And observed how there seemed hardly “a pervert, degenerate, or
miscreant” in New York who did not eventually found their way
to Macready's doorstep in this bad part of the city. Funnily enough,
Macready tells Binney a slight variation on the joke
Rorschach told in Watchmen, but here the joke was about The
Great Deburau instead of Pagliacci the Clown. However, the punchline
was exactly the same.
I suppose
these comic books and characters came to mind, because I always
viewed these lonely, hardboiled private-eyes as these darker,
incorruptible capeless crusaders who stand vastly even when the odds
are stacked against them. And that is certainly the case here. Once
he recovered, Binney is back on the street to find the money he had
been hired to find and, along the way, he encounters some truly
appalling and disgusting crimes involves children and teenage boys –
as well as having a hard-to-hard with Pelfrey's murderer. Slowly, but
surely, he uncovers a plot involving millions of dollars and the
people responsible handed down a death sentence, which forced him to
fight for his life. Or, in this case, relied on his wits and military
background to outwit his would-be murderer.
This is what
often makes the private-eye novel superior to their bleak, overly
pretentious cousin, the literary crime novel, because they lack one
thing that is nearly always present in even the gloomiest private-eye
tale – namely a flicker of light and genuine humanity. A shining
light in a pitch-black world. In this case, it's not just Binney who
presents that light, but Macready also turned out to be surprisingly
human character. And there's splendid side-character, known only as
Anthony, who's a retired, acid-scarred police-detective supplementing
his "well deserved police pension" as a bill collector.
What a warm, human character he turned out to be. And what a shame he
only appeared very late into the story. These characters are
flickering lights in a pitch-black corner of the world that reminds
everyone around them that not all hope is lost. And that there's
always something worth fighting for.
On a whole,
Die Again, Macready is not as good as a puzzle as some of the
other hardboiled locked room stories, but, solely as a private-eye
yard, it can stand shoulder to shoulder with its better known
counterparts and how the deafness of Binney is handled even makes it
standout a little bit – which is more than just a gimmick. The
deafness is very well-handled and presented in a believable way,
which is shown to have both its advantages and drawbacks.
So I might
return to this series, because the synopsis of the third title in the
series, The Nightmare File (1986) is intriguing to say the
least ("deaths of men who seem to die from fear in the throes of
violent nightmares").
On a final
note, I noted earlier that there's scarcely any information available
about Livingston on the web, but, when I finished writing this
review, I found a piece of background information in a very obvious
place – inside the back-flap of the dust-jacket. Livingston was "an
ex-merchant seaman" who worked "as a medical editor and
lives in upstate New York." A Piece of Silence (1982)
was "nominated as the best hardcover private-eye novel" of '82 by the Private Eye Writers of America.
Hey, glad to read your review, I'm also a Livingston fan....Looking forward to trying out your other recommendations - Shereen
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