Donald
Clough Cameron was an American journalist who worked as a crime
reporter for the Detroit Free Press and the Windsor Star,
a Canadian newspaper, in the 1920s, but in the 1930s Cameron moved to
fiction and began writing detective novels, pulp stories and comic
books – reportedly making some notable contributions to the
Batman mythos. Such as creating a precursor to the Batcave and
introducing Alfred as Bruce Wayne's butler. Cameron also co-created
and wrote the earliest Superboy
stories in More Fun Comics. But what about his legacy as a
mystery writer?
Cameron wrote six
detective novels, three of which, Murder's Coming (1939),
Grave Without Grass (1940) and And So He Had to Die
(1941), featured a young criminologist, Abelard Voss. The other three
titles, Death at Her Elbow (1940), Dig Another Grave
(1946) and White for a Shroud (1947), appear to be standalone
novels, but none of them have been reprinted since the mid-1950s. And
they've all been pretty much forgotten today.
I know Anthony
Boucher lukewarmly praised Dig Another Grave, a story of
newsmen, racketeering and cafe society, as "acceptable" in
The Anthony Boucher Chronicles: Reviews and Commentary (2009).
So not very encouraging to start digging around, but what secured
this long-forgotten writer a spot on my wishlist was a 2014 review,
posted on Past
Offenses, of White for a Shroud. A review describing a
fascinating detective story set in a small, isolated Michigan town
paralyzed by an unforgiving blizzard, an avalanche of snow and frozen
corpses – dug out of the snowbanks all over town. White for a
Shroud finally made it to the snow-topped peak of Mt.-to-be-Read!
Red Rock County is a small community
of "1,300-odd men, women and children" are facing "a
storm that may rank with the worst on record," which will
isolate them to their tiny corner of the world for the better part of
a week.
The "snow was an aerial avalanche
of glassy points" that choked highways, ditches and streets,
blotted out railways and "rose like floodwater in the Upper
Michigan forests." Snow blocked the doorways of houses and
stores that were laboriously excavated, replacing the familiar
storefronts with "doorways in the snow," reinforced by
planks and bearing makeshift signs. A wide and lofty tunnel had been
dug from a local bar to the keep the local day laborers warm as
everything around them has come to a grinding halt. So, as all they
can do is sit around, drink cheap whiskey and hate, there are still "plenty of barroom fights."
Andrew Brant, editor and owner of the
Red Rock Reporter, remarks to Sheriff Ed Worth that,
statistically, there are two murderers in Red Rock because "one
in every six hundred and fifty will commit murder" and its
1,300-odd citizens have now "anything to do but murder" –
a remark that would come back to haunt him later that day. And the
problem concerns two of his loyal, long-time friends, John and Ella
Macfarlane, who get stuck up to their necks in coldblooded murder!
Brant picked up the rumor that Macfarlane is closing down his paper
mill for the rest of the winter, but when goes out to investigate, he
discovers Macfarlane's unconscious body on the floor of the foreman's
room. A hunting cap, a fur-lined mitten and blood on the conveyor
belt of the wood chopper suggests the unpopular straw boss, Ralston
Crane, had been disposed of in "the thousands of gallons of pulp
and acid" of the paper mill's pulp room. A perfect murder with "no possible way of proving the corpis delicti."
Macfarlane has no memory of what
happened, but thinks he could have thrown him in and turned on the
machine. Brant is not prepared to hand over his friend to the police
and decided to make everyone believe Crane lost his way in the snow,
which apparently was not uncommon at the time. Brant expects stories
to appear in the newspapers about "farmer who had died between
their barns and houses, motorists who had frozen in their car"
and "children who had lost their ways and would never return
home." Unfortunately, Macfarlane is shot and seriously wounded
that night. And then, the frozen bodies begin to turn up.
This is where the plot of the story
becomes nigh impossible to discuss in detail without tearing through
the paper-thin layers that make up the whole plot.
I guess the plot is best described as
a chain reaction, one thing leading to another, which gives the
illusion of a tangled scheme, but there's really nothing clever, or
inspired, to be found in any of the razor thin, poorly clued
plot-strands – except for the storyline between Brant, John and
Ella. White for a Shroud is an average detective novel with a,
on a whole, a weak plot that was propped up the beautifully depicted,
snow-buried setting. So still a perfectly acceptable, relatively
short book to kill two or three hours with during one of those long,
cold winter days. As long as you don't expect a stone cold classic.
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