Arthur E. Ashley was an
English circuit lecturer, novelist and a founding member of the
Nottingham Writers' Club, who penned eighteen detective novels,
published between 1937 and 1959 under the name of "Francis
Vivian," many of which are helmed by his cunning,
orderly-minded policeman – Inspector Gordon Knollis of New Scotland
Yard. One year ago, this month, Dean
Street Press reissued the entire Inspector Knollis series and two
titles made it onto my best-of
list of 2018, The
Threefold Cord (1947) and The
Singing Masons (1950).
So another one of
Vivian's detective novels was lined up for the beginning of this
year, enticed by John
Norris' twofer review "Two
Cases for Inspector Knollis," but hey, my planning rarely pans
out. And towards the end of the year is still within the same year as
my original plan.
The Laughing Dog
(1949) is the fifth entry in the series and I seriously begin to
suspect Vivian modeled his detective novels on the "crime of
quiet domestic life" Hercule Poirot imagined in The
ABC Murders (1936) and worked out by Agatha
Christie in Cards
on the Table (1936). A murder with a very small, often
closely-knit cast of no more than three or four suspects, which tends
to complicate matters more than they clarify in an old-fashioned,
deftly plotted detective story – one that asks the reader which
of the four was it? The Laughing Dog easily stands as one
of Vivian's tightest and tidiest plotted mystery novels to date. A
novel strong on detection!
The Laughing Dog
begins with a prologue, set in Algiers, where a holidaying Dr. Hugh
Challoner meets a sketch artist, Aubrey Highton, who discover that
each have "a string that vibrates to the same note." A
mutual affinity prompting Challoner to offer Highton assistance with
landing "a steady job" as a commercial artist when he
returns to England. There is, however, a hint that not everything is
as it seems on the surface.
Highton sees people "as
birds, or animals, or even flowers" and this artistic quirk
developed into a revealing, but cruel, style of caricature and
depicted Dr. Challoner as a bemused English fox-terrier with its head
cocked – "a laughing dog." Highton claimed the image
came from "the realm of the subconscious," but the
caricature clearly upset Dr. Challoner. And the laughing dog would
haunt him all way back to England.
One day, not long after
his return home, Dr. Challoner is found dead with a cord around his
neck in his surgery and a doodle was found in his desk diary of a dog
that "was laughing in human fashion." Highton was one of
the last people to see him, but Inspector Gordon Knollis has three
other suspects to consider. Mrs. Madeleine Burke was the last patient
on the day of the murder and she came to arrange an operation for her
teenage son, but Knollis quickly discovers they had more than merely
a doctor/patient relationship, which, in turn, provides Dr.
Challoner's daughter and future son-in-law with a motive – because
Joan and Eric Lincoln would have lost a good chunk of money if they
got married. So, there you have it, the entangled intimacy of a
quiet, domestic murder with only four suspects that Poirot imagined
in The ABC Murders.
John Norris noted in his
previously mentioned review that the plot of The Laughing Dog
has "a taint of an impossible crime about it," which is
sort of true, but not because of any locked doors or windows. There
were a number of witnesses, not all of them reliable, who had those
exists under observation and there statements often acted as a
counter weights to the possible guilt, or innocence, of the suspects.
Sometimes these witnesses and suspects were one and the same person.
So hardly a genuine locked
room mystery.
I think The Laughing
Dog is best described as a particular well-done, textbook example
of the closed-circle of suspects detective story, which kept the
circle as tight as possible, with only a handful of candidates for an
early morning appointment with the hangman – each with a motive,
the means and (more or less) an opportunity to commit the murder. A
deceptively simple approach to the traditional detective story, but,
when handled with skill, you'll be constantly second-guessing
yourself. When you finally think you have figured it all out, you'll
find that you have either overlooked or outright rejected the
obvious. And this is exactly the kind of trick Vivian managed to pull
off here.
Admittedly, there are
some (minor) caveats that mainly have to do with the movements of the
characters, relaying a little bit on coincidences, but other than
that, it was a well-executed plot!
I have already made a
comparison between The Laughing Dog and Christie's Cards on
the Table, but, after a while, the story began to remind me of
one of those closed-circle of suspect stories you often find in
mystery
anime-and manga series (e.g. Gosho Aoyama's Case
Closed/Detective Conan). A short, tightly-plotted
detective story set in a house with only a handful of suspects, good,
old-fashioned detective work and (visual) clues. A visual clue, of
some sort, here are the drawings and doodles of the laughing dog that
hound Knollis throughout the story and is what keeps "the outer
circle of the problem" shrouded in mysteries. Several months
ago, I came across a very similar kind of clue, a drawing of a dog,
in Motohiro Katou's "The
Fading of Star Map," from the third volume of Q.E.D.
Coincidentally, those two stories have more in common than just a
visual, dog-themed clue, but let's not tread into spoiler territory.
Obviously, I liked the
pure, undiluted detection-oriented and fairly clued of The
Laughing Dog, but I would be selling the story short, if I didn't
mention Vivian provided some background details about Knollis.
Early in the story,
Knollis mentions he has "a wife and two boys." We got a
bit more of a backstory in chapter XI, "The Thread of Thought,"
in which Knollis revealed he had studied mechanical engineering, but "the engineering trade wasn't in a healthy state at that time"
and joined the police as an experiment – because he liked taking
things to pieces and finding out how they worked. During this time,
Knollis learned first hand that people can be "as interesting as
machines" and "began to take them to pieces to see how
they ticked." You can certainly see this back in the way
Knollis grappled with the people and problems that faced him in this
story. Knollis also voiced his disapproval of capital punishment on
two occasions, but that could have been Vivian bleeding through the
character. In any case, a surprising bit of characterization in this
plot-focused detective story.
So what more can I add?
The Laughing Dog is a solidly plotted, thoroughbred detective
novel with a tricky plot, dogged police work, cleverly planted clues
and well-drawn characters, which makes it one of my favorite entries
in the series. Highly recommended!
Thanks for the review. I will have to get a copy.
ReplyDeleteHope you enjoy it, Anon.
DeleteWhere should I start with Vivian? I tried to read one, but was put off by the English provincialism.
ReplyDeleteProvincial? You mean his rural/village mysteries? I've only read five of his novels and thought The Threefold Cord was even better than The Singing Masons and liked The Elusive Bowman, but you might find them too provincial. The Sleeping Island was disappointing. So I suggest you give The Laughing Dog a shot.
Delete