Back in March, the
modern-day prospectors of Golden Age mysteries, Dean
Street Press, reissued three classic, but obscure, detective
novels by a forgotten husband-and-wife writing tandem, E.
and M.A. Radford – who were big proponents of the fair play
principle. As they demonstrated in their very early Murder
Isn't Cricket (1946). A detective story littered with
challenges to the reader, clues and a clue-finder.
Who
Killed Dick Whittington? (1947) is the Radfords sixth mystery
novel and one of three titles Dean Street Press selected for
reprinting, which were picked on the strength of their "strong
plots, clever detection" and "evocative settings."
Nigel Moss noted in his introduction that these three titles also
present an attractive portrayal of their series-detective, Dr. Harry
Mason.
A portrayal showing a
combination of powerful intellect, reasoning and "creative
scientific methods of investigation," but never “losing
awareness” and "sensitivity concerning the human
predicaments encountered." A scientific police detective for
the modern age!
You can find all these
qualities within the pages of Who Killed Dick Whittington? A
fine example of the theatrical mystery, plotted around the popular
Christmas pantomime Dick
Whittington and His Cat, which here provides a stage for a
bewildering murder – one that initially appeared to be utterly
impossible. However, this is not an impossible crime story in any
shape or form.
Henri de Benyat theater
company is performing the pantomime Dick Whittington at the
Pavilion Theatre, Burlington-on-Sea, with Miss Norma de Grey as the
Principle Boy playing Dick, but Miss De Grey is famously unpopular
backstage. De Grey "resented applause" except when "it
was directed towards her own performance" and went as far as
having gags or verses cut which gave other members "more
applause than she herself received." So there's more than one
members of the theatrical company who daydreamed about wringing her
neck.
Dick Whittington and
His Cat has a well-known scene, known as the Highgate Hill scene,
in which Dick and the Cat take a nap on a mossy bank by the milestone
on Highgate Hill. And dreams of the Bow Bells "Turn Again,
Whittington, Lord Mayor of London."
During the performance,
Miss de Grey misses her lines and doesn't stir from the mossy bank.
Someone else shouts her lines, the curtain comes down and they rushed
to the bank, but Miss De Grey has passed away and the doctor has some
dire news – she died from "a dose of prussic acid." The
post mortem reveals the poison had been injected with a hypodermic
syringe and the only person who could have done it is the man who
played the Cat, Jimmy Martin.
Vintage poster |
However, the Cat is found
poisoned and on the brink of death in his dressing room. This gave
the murder the initial appearance of an impossible crime, but this is
illusion dispelled before the halfway mark. Nevertheless, the local
police are getting nowhere and decide to call in the Yard.
Detective-Inspector Harry
Manson, head of the Forensic Research Laboratory, is called in, but,
while looking into the murder, he also investigates a secondary case.
A firebug who's setting fires to dress shops, warehouses and antique
stores with stock of "a peculiarly inflammable nature."
Resulting in a total loss of inventory and high insurance payouts.
This fire-raising case features some of the most satisfying
scientific detective work since R.
Austin Freeman's Dr. John Thorndyke solved crimes through science
in Victorian-era England! Which is not all that surprising. Edwin
Radford was "a keen admirer of the popular Dr Thorndyke."
I wonder if he had also read the early forensic mysteries by Eric
Wood (c.f. Death
of an Oddfellow, 1938).
Dr. Harry Manson visits
the scenes of the fires to collect samples, such as portions of
charred wood, soot and ash, which are analyzed and revealed that the
fires were no accidents, but the key piece of evidence are traces of "a curious metal" – which is exceedingly rare in
Britain. Showing in the end how only one person in the whole country
could have had a hand in the fires. Dr. Manson also engages in some
good, old-fashioned detective work in the Dick Whittington murder
case.
Most notably, Dr. Manson
deduces that two items were taken from a dressing room and the reader
is challenged to figure out what these two missing items are.
Naturally, he finds a link between the murder of Miss Norma de Grey
and the fires. Nearly everything, except for the motive, fitted
nicely together.
Who Killed Dick
Whittington? is a fascinating, highly successful merger of the
sophisticated theatrical mysteries of Ngaio
Marsh with the scientific detection of the Dr. Thorndyke series.
The result is a satisfying detective novel that was even better than
Murder Isn't Cricket. So expect a review of the third
reprinted title, Murder Jigsaw (1944), sometime in the future.
I hope Dean Street Press
decides to reprint more by the Radfords, because they have written
some intriguingly-titled detective novels with equally intriguing
premises: Death
of a Frightened Editor (1959), Murder of Three Ghosts
(1963), Murder
Magnified (1965) and Death
of an Ancient Saxon (1969).
I enjoy theatrical mysteries - who doesn't love the idea of theatre people bumping each other off? I may have to grab a copy of this one.
ReplyDelete"who doesn't love the idea of theatre people bumping each other off?"
DeleteYou won't get any complaints from me. I love a good theatrical murder! Hope you enjoy it.
I have this, on Kate's recommendation. So good to see you liked it to. But I read the gawd offal Death of a Hollow Man by the Midsomer lady recently, and that might have put me off of theatrical mysteries. Or any mysteries. Or books. Or breathing.
ReplyDeleteThat's hardly fair to historical mysteries and the breath in your lungs, but sure, use this one as palette cleanser. I hope you enjoy it!
DeleteIn your review of Murder Isn't Cricket you mentioned the "numerous challenges and sign-posts to where the clues can be found, ... [and even] a clue-finder going over all of the clues". Do the numerous challenges and the 'clue-finder' exist in this book also? As a beginner to this grandest game, I need all the help I can get.
ReplyDeleteThere are one or two challenges to the reader here, but not as numerous as in Murder Isn't Cricket.
Delete