Herbert
Brean was an American journalist, editor and writer, who wrote
the widely acclaimed How to Stop Smoking (1951) and edited The
Mystery Writer's Handbook (1956), but the bulk of his work
comprises of seven detective novels and ten short stories –
published in such magazines as Thrilling Detective and Ellery
Queen's Mystery Magazine. These short stories include the elusive
impossible crime tales "The Man Who Talked with Spirits" (1951)
and "Nine Hours Late On the Opening Run" (1954).
So, while Brean hardly
was one of the most prolific mystery writers, he produced one
detective novel that garnered somewhat of a reputation among locked
room readers.
Wilders Walks Away
(1948) was described by Curt
Evans as "a fusion of Ellery
Queen and John
Dickson Carr" in his 2014 review
and you could described the plot as Queen-style Wrightsville story
with a Carr-like plot. A plot concerning a series of seemingly
impossible disappearances, stretching across many generations, in a
historical, beautifully preserved New England town. Wilders Walks
Away is a very well written, ambitious and imaginative debut with
all the hallmarks of a classic, but ended in disappointment with an
underwhelming solution.
Barry Ergang's wrote in
his 2003 review,
which alerted me to Brean, he thought he had found in Wilders
Walks Away a companion to Carr's The
Three Coffins (1935) and Hake Talbot's Rim
of the Pit (1944) for "ultimate greatness," but
that "degree of feeling didn't sustain itself" – which
didn't stop him from "enthusiastically" recommending it.
My fellow Carr Cultist, "JJ" of The
Invisible Event, had a similar response and even awarded the book
four-stars in his 2017 review.
So, in spite of its weak,
underwhelming conclusion, Wilders Walks Away remains Brean's
most well-known mystery novel, which I find depressing. There are
three mysteries from his hands that are superior to Wilders Walks
Away.
The
Clock Strikes Thirteen (1954) is an excellent
detective-cum-thriller set on an isolated island during a potential
outbreak of a deadly, weaponized bacteria. The
Traces of Brillhart (1960) is an amusing romp about a sleazy
musician who appears to be impervious to death, but his true
masterpiece is Hardly
a Man is Now Alive (1950). A truly Carr-like detective story
about a quasi-impossible disappearance, ghostly manifestations and a
historical mystery as a sub-plot, but, more importantly, has a
solution that delivered on its premise – which is why it deserves
the reputation Wilders Walks Away still enjoys. So, I decided
to reread the book to see if my high opinion on it has changed. Nope.
:)
Hardly a Man is Now
Alive is the third novel about Brean's series-detective and
freelance photographer, Reynold Frame, which has been published in
the UK as Murder Now and Then in 1952. Somehow, that year is
listed on some places
as the original year of publication, but it's 1950.
The story begins with
Reynold Frame and Constance Wilder, who met in the now too often
mentioned Wilders Walks Away, driving a battered convertible
to the historical town of Concord, Massachusetts, where they plan to
get married by Dr. John Annandale – a one-hundred and four years
old man who "knew Ralph Waldo Emerson personally." When he
was a boy of twelve, he heard from "the lips of a man who was in
it," a 98-year-old Ben Tick, the story of the Concord fight in
1775. But their path to the altar is littered with obstacles.
Firstly, when they arrive
at the home of Constance's Aunt Kate and Uncle Bowler, circumstances
left them with only a single spare bedroom. So they booked him a room
with Tom Satterthwaite down the street.
Frame learns that a previous roomers, J.J. Walmsley, who had his room disappeared six weeks ago under peculiar circumstances and left behind a baffling question: how could Walmsley "walk down an uncarpeted stair," carrying a number of traveling bags, and go past "a room in which other people are sitting" without being heard or seen? And then there's the haunting history of the bedroom itself with its ghostly manifestations.
During the Concord fight,
a British soldier was mortally wounded and had died in the bedroom of
the Satterthwaite house with "a betty lamp" besides him.
The lamp mysteriously disappeared as the soldier took his last
breath.
On his first night, Frame
wakes up to find a small, sardine can-sized metal box on his bureau
with a chain, hook and "a sort of sprout from which the wick
protruded" – burning wick gave off a fishy smell. Next
morning, the whale-oil lamp has disappeared from the room. More than
once, the ghostly, disembodied sounds of "an army marching to a
fife and drum" can be heard in the room. Brean's handling of
these quasi-impossible situations shows he had learned from the
mistakes he made in Wilders Walks Away.
The disappearance of
Walmsley and the ghosts of the Revolutionary War are simply another
layer of an incredibly stacked plot, instead of the focal point,
which were properly clued and explained well before the final chapter
rolled around. This really helped. I also think it helped that they
were presented, not as impossible crimes, but simply as tricky
problems and were put to good use. Even when they were already
explained and dismissed. For example, in the final lines of chapter
13, Brean briefly rose to the height of Carr when he superbly used "the sound of the British detachment marching." A
cliffhanger that would made any writer of magazine and newspaper
serials see green with envy. However, this is still only about half
of the plot.
Dr. John Annandale tells the first-hand account he heard as a boy of the battle of Concord, which is a "factual account" except for "the incident of the fleeing officer" and "the presence of Job Wilder," presenting the story with a historical mystery from nearly two-hundred years ago – why did the British officer broke and ran? The fleeing officer, Lt. Percy Nightingale, was the same officer who died and haunts the bedroom at the Satterthwaite house. This is another well-done, properly clued plot-thread with a delightfully simplistic solution that has been "staring everyone in the face for almost two centuries." Only reason why nobody noticed it until now is because "the individual bits of knowledge" were divided between several people. And it took an outsider, like Frame, to put them together. I liked it. And there's a second historical plot-thread, tied to one of the present-day mysteries, involving a long-lost secret from two of the luminaries of Concord's rich past. Still, there's more. So much more.
A badly decomposed body
of a man is found in an old, disused well behind the Satterthwaite
house. Dr. Annandale disappears before the wedding without a trace. A
ghost is seen peeking from behind a tree. A spiritualist is very
anxious to switch rooms. A séance is held and the missing ghost lamp
turns up again.
On the surface, Hardly
a Man is Now Alive appears to be an incomprehensibly complex,
maze-like detective novel with numerous, interconnecting plot-threads
stretching across two centuries, but Brean untangled them with ease
and the result is very satisfying – showing how childishly simple
everything looked beneath all those layers of obfuscation. Nearly
every plot-thread, except for the second historical mystery, were
adequately clued or hinted at and the chapters are littered with
opening quotes and informative footnotes. Really, the only things
missing were one or two floor plans and a challenge to the reader.
Admittedly, all of the
individual plot-threads are pretty average by themselves, particular
the problem of the murdered man in the well, but, when pulled
together, they form a pleasantly busy and satisfying detective story.
A detective story you can breeze through in one sitting and not feel
like you wasted even a single second. This makes Hardly a Man is
Now Alive the mystery novel Brean should be remembered for.
Dude, I am, like, a couple of weeks away from reviewing this...serendipity! Or coincidence! Either way, I've given the above a quick skim and shall be back to compare notes when I've read it myself...
ReplyDeleteI hope that, by the time you get around to reading it, enough time has passed for us to agree again, because we burned through our monthly quota on The Opening Night Murders. We were in fierce agreement on that one.
DeleteEveryone seems to be in agreement about Wilders, when it comes to us bloggers.
ReplyDeleteOn the strength of the reviews that you, Ben and Jim have given, I pulled “Hardly a Man is now Alive” out of the big pile and I’m glad I did.
ReplyDeleteBrean effortlessly propels the plot with Revolutionary War history, literary treasure, a ghost, a séance, an obsessed medium, a disappearing elderly man, etc. It reminded me of Carr’s “Till Death Due Us Part” in that I could not turn the pages fast enough with many chapters leaving me hanging. It was a tough book to put down so I finished it quickly. A minor classic that definitely should be re-printed.
For years, I've been saying Hardly a Man is Now Alive deserves the reputation of Wilders Walks Away. And, for once, everyone agreed!
DeleteSo glad you enjoyed it and welcome to the club! Yes, it needs to reprinted. Maybe Otto Penzler's American Mystery Classics? What's more American than a minor mystery classic that has a plot rooted in the Revolutionary War?