F.A. Haak-Ochsendorf was
a now obscure, long-forgotten Dutch author of children's fiction and
verses, but, under the penname of "F. van Overvoorde," she
produced two equally obscure, little-known detective novels –
entitled Moorden in Maastricht (Murders in Maastricht,
1937) and De groene draak (The Green Dragon, 1939). She
has become so obscure that the only relevant piece of information I
was able to find came from an archived newsletter
briefly mentioning her second detective novel.
The Green Dragon
is set in a boarding school, De Voorden, which encompasses three
adjacent estates: De Voorde, Overvoorde and Steenvoorde. Apparently,
there was a Catholic boarding school in Steenvoorde between 1922 and
1944. The boarding school was destroyed during a failed launch of a
German V2 that killed fourteen people. So my guess is that
Haak-Ochsendorf worked with children and very likely had some sort of
a link to De Voorden. And adopted the name of one of the estates as a
pseudonym.
I ended my previous
review
with a little teaser how I found an obscure Dutch mystery novel,
namely Murders in Maastricht, which promised to be something
along the lines of Christopher
Bush. Well, I wasn't completely wrong, but Van Overvoorde is
bush-league compared to the master of the unbreakable alibi.
Murders in Maastricht
is narrated by a Dutch-Hungarian female journalist, Mia Oroshàza,
who's a roving reporter for the Nieuwscourier (News Courier),
but the story begins with her traveling to Maastricht with a group of
friends – a city in the southern region of the country famous for
its traditional, three-day carnival. The festivities begins with "the
traditional opening of the Maastrichtian carnival," eleven
cannon shots, followed by dancing, drinking, partying and drinking.
Craig
Rice would have been proud!
A three-day, costumed
bender, but at the end of the third day "the realm of Prince
Carnival" is drawing to a close and Mia has gathered with her
friends at a club. Everyone's in costume. This becomes a problem when
the manager interrupts the last minutes of the party to announce that
someone has died. And it looks like murder.
The victim is
Chief-Inspector Bob Smeele, of the Utrecht Police, who is a part of
Mia's group and his body was found slumped in a chair, beneath a
staircase, in a dimly lit hallway with a gunshot wound. Smeele was
fully clad in a cowboy costume and a revolver (with silencer) was
laying on the coffee table in front of him, but obviously, this was
murder. Not suicide. So enter Inspector Floris van Flierop, nicknamed "F.F.," who allows Mia to function as his unofficial assistance.
Murders in Maastricht
should have been titled Murder Among Friends, because the only
suspects are found within her circle of friends and some minor
characters who are peripherally involved.
This group consists of a
colleague of Smeele and Mia's love interest, Peter Giesink. Bella
Yntema is a long-time friend of Mia, a friendship dating back to
their college days, who's dating the handsome, aristocratic "Lion"
Duraval – a born Maastrichtian and party guide to his friends
during carnival. Ella Smeele is Bob's younger wife who had been
called back to Utrecht to attend to their sick, two-year-old son,
Bobbie. During the festival, two acquaintances of Yntema, Charles and
Alice Janssen, join the group of friends. Mia and F.F. have to figure
out who of these people had motive and alibi, or lacked them, which
is complicated when they suspect the murderer might have walked
around in an identical cowboy costume as Smeele. The investigation
brings Mia from Den Haag, Utrecht and Maastricht to Paris and the
Riviera.
So there you have a
pretty solid premise for a good, old-fashioned detective story, but
Van Overvoorde was more interested in storytelling than plotting.
Many irrelevancies smother some of the good, if simplistic,
plot-ideas.
A second murder is
committed around the halfway mark when a woman is found brutally
stabbed to death in a garden shed, but, while she had a connection to
Bob Smeele, she was killed by a character outside of the main story –
an actual unknown X-character! I was not amused. You can say about
the attempted murder of Mia in a dark movie theater during a
screening of a detective movie, De bloederigen vingerafdruk
(The Bloody Fingerprint), but this turned out to be a
completely irrelevant plot-thread. And committed by an unknown
character who's only mentioned after being arrested. What a way to a
great set-piece!
There were, however, some
good points that deserve mentioning. The choice of murderer was
excellently done and genuinely felt as a (psychological)
inevitability, in spite of the red herrings that were dragged across
the trail, which found good use for the clues found in the
children-and fairy tale books. The alibi-trick was a bit prosaic and
is to the alibi story what a piece of string and a thin pencil is to
the locked
room mystery, but it fitted the murder and the murderer's
actions. So I can be forgiving of that. I also liked the two
crime-scene maps. Even if they were completely useless.
So, all things
considered, Murders in Maastricht is a very uneven mystery
novel and, on a whole, a pretty average detective story that sorely
lacked any kind of ingenuity, but I can't help feel a little
protective of these Dutch Golden Age mysteries. My country doesn't
have as rich a history as America and Britain, full of iconic writers
and novels, but I always find a joy to see one of these stories play
out in my own backyard. Even when they're not entirely up to scratch.
So I'll end this review by saying that my country has produced far
better and more ingenious
detective stories than Murders in Maastricht, but also
churned out some pretty
bad and much worse
specimens.
Thanks for reviewing Dutch detective novels and short stories. Even if this one is not worth seeking out, I made a note of your enthusiasm for Anne van Doorn. Are there other Dutch authors you would recommend?
ReplyDeleteCan you speak or read Dutch, Christophe? I can give you some good recommendations, but precious little of it is available in English or any other language.
DeleteMy recommendations: M.P.O. Books' De laatste kans (The Last Chance) and Een afgesloten huis (A Sealed House), which are respectively one of the best Dutch-language mystery novels and a classic locked room novel. Cor Docter wrote an excellent, but short-lived, series about Commissioner Daan Vissering that tackled such tropes as the impossible crime and dying message. However, the best of the three is a simple, but very nicely done, whodunit, Droeve poedel in Delfshaven (Sad Poodle in Delfshaven). Bertus Aafjes' historical Judge Ooka series has often been compared to Robert van Gulik's Judge Dee, but, unlike Van Gulik, his detective stories have been translated into English.
I want to recommend A.C. Baantjer, who was my formal introduction to the detective story, but the translations are spotty with the translator taking some weird liberties. I believe John Norris suspected the translator of dumbing down the story to accommodate those uncultured Americans.
If you're interested in "Anne van Doorn," pseudonym of M.P.O. Books, Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine is going to publish a translation of "De dichter die zichzelf opsloot" ("The Poet Who Locked Himself In") either later this year or early 2020.
Lastly, Ho-Ling Wong has reviewed many obscure, Golden Age-period Dutch mystery novels on his blog.
So, I hope this was helpful.
Oops, I should have mentioned that I can indeed speak and read Dutch. These suggestions are very helpful, as I only knew of Baantjer before reading your blog. Do you have some more suggestions for non-translated works? Bedankt!
Delete"Oops, I should have mentioned that I can indeed speak and read Dutch."
DeleteVlaams?
Anyway, you should take a look at the website of E-Pulp, publisher of the Anne van Doorn's Corbijn and De Jong series, who also published Eugenius Quak's Gruwelijk is het huwelijk (modern pulp) and P. Dieudonné's Rechercheur De Klerck en het doodvonnis (review coming soon). A second link you want to check out is a 52-part blog-series, entitled "Plaat van de Maand,” which was published on De Spanningsblogs and discussed countless obscure Dutch mystery writers. A lot of them from the Golden Age.
If you want any specific recommendations, Baantjer's De Cock en de moord in seance, De Cock en de ganzen van de dood and De Cock en een dodelijke dreiging are the closest to the traditional detective story. During the early 2000s, Simon de Waal and Dick van den Heuvel wrote a short series of historical mystery novels about the real-life Dr. John Thorndyke of the Low Countries, C.J. van Ledden-Hulsebosch. There are only four books, Moord in Tuschinski, De wraak van de keizer, Spelen met vuur en De Rembrandtcode.
I already mentioned Bertus Aafjes, Cor Docter and Robert van Gulik, but they come highly recommended.
If you click on "The Muniment Room," at the top of the page, you can find an alphabetical overview of all my blog-posts and reviews. A number of them are of obscure, Dutch (locked room) mystery novels like Willy Corsari's De voetstappen op de trap.
Thank you very much for this wealth of information.
ReplyDeleteI am indeed Flemish, though I have been living in the US for the last 25 years.
Ah, my deductive powers weren't entirely off. Oh, and happy hunting!
DeleteWhy did you think Flemish rather than Dutch? The French first name?
ReplyDeleteYes, the French name was one, but you also said you can speak and read Dutch. Not that you're Dutch. So, in combination with the French name, I figured you had to be Flemish. Het is een simpele kwestie van combineren en deduceren.
Delete