Earlier this year, I was introduced to
the excellent detective fiction of "Charles
Forsyte," a penname shared between Gordon and Vicky Philo, who
wrote four detective novels in the traditional mold of the genre's
Golden Age – three of which Robert Adey listed in Locked Room
Murders (1991). Diplomatic
Death (1961) evoked the spirit of Clayton
Rawson with a murderer resorting to stage illusions at the
British Consulate in Istanbul. Diving
Death (1962) uses a tight bundle of alibis to create an
impossible murder at the bottom of the sea, but their last novel has
a surprisingly chatty, character-driven story and plot.
Murder
with Minarets (1968) is a standalone mystery novel with the
center stage being a block of flats, in Ankara, Turkey, where the
British Embassy houses its staff members. Story is mainly concerned
with the domestic and social side of the diplomatic life with
dinners, social functions and a picnic filling out the story, which
is the dominion of the Embassy wives.
Embassy wives "as a breed were no
better and no worse than any other group of woman in a small
community," but they "could be nearly as devastatingly
cruel as small children to anyone who does not go with the herd."
Nobody tried harder to belong than the Austrian wife of one of the
First Secretaries, Magda Tranter. An unlikable and impossible woman
who could have been forgiven her unsuitable clothes, artificial
manner and tantrums, but she had "no vestige of a sense of
humour" – British "can forgive almost anything but
that." But it still comes as a shock when her husband finds her
body in the bathtub. Apparently dead of a heart attack.
Magda was under treatment for a weak
heart and was buried without any questions being asked, but Paul
Tranter is behaving oddly after her funeral and people begin to
imagine things. But, as one of them states, "do you really want
to hang him?" It's not until Paul dies in that same bathtub
that an investigation, official and unofficial, is carried out. This
time, it could have been nothing else than murder! But first there's
something I need to nitpick about.
Murder with Minarets is listed
in Adey's Locked Room Murders as "death by induced heart
attack in a locked room," but there never was any mention of a
locked or broken down door in Magda's case and with the second death
it was explicitly mentioned that the door was unlocked. So not a
locked room or impossible crime at all. I suppose the clever method
would have allowed for an impossible crime scenario, even with an
unlocked door, but, for that to have worked, the murderer needed a
dominant alibi. And then you would have gotten an impossible crime
akin to Henry Wade's Constable,
Guard Thyself (1934).
Nevertheless, even without resulting
in an impossible murder, the trick is a clever one and worthy of the
bizarre
murder methods that was one of the specialties of the Golden Age
detective story. Jan Duquesne is one of the Embassy wives who had
nagging questions about the death of Magda and, when Paul is killed,
she decides to turn amateur detective together with her sister, Gina,
and a visiting archaeologist, Christopher Milner-Browne – who's the
brother of a Second Secretary, Peter Milner-Browne. But they have to
look for the murderer among some very familiar faces.
Tom Hadley is Her Majesty's Consul in
Ankara and lives with his wife, "Ba," and their two children on
the second floor of the Embassy block, which they shared with the
Tranters. The thin wall separating the two flats made it impossible
not to hear the Tranters rows and Magda's "mid-European
tantrums." The spacious flat on the floor below is occupied by
the Counsellor, Charles O'Halloran, and his wife, Laura. Peter
Milner-Browne has the floor above the Hadleys and Tranters, but there
also two outsiders who have to be considered. Francis Allerdyce is a
violin professor at the Ankara Conservatoire and had "not only a
natural inclination to meet Magda's advances halfway," but "a
conviction that it was almost a professional necessity" to do
so. And then there's his wife, Doune Allardyce. Most of the clues
have to be picked from what they did or, more importantly, what they
said.
John
Norris said in his review
that he had the feeling the female half of the writing duo was in
charge of writing Murder with Minarets, which is exactly the
impression I got while reading the story. I suspect Gordon's most
important contribution to the plot was the murder method. Everything
else is exactly what you would expect from the some of (lesser-known)
Crime Queens.
To quote John, "the ingenious
murder method" is "reminiscent of the kind of thing
Christianna
Brand would dream up" with "the best clue planting is
done in casual conversation," which is another reminder of such
writers as Brand, Dorothy
Bowers and Helen
McCloy. So the plot is very talkative and without the focus on
alibis, false-solutions and impossible crimes, the book notably
differs from its predecessors in tone and style. But not for the
worst!
Murder with Minarets is purely
a character-driven whodunit with cleverly planted clues in seemingly
meaningless patter or casual remarks, which can make the technical
murder method feel a little out of place in a novel resembling a
gentle comedy-of-manners – coated with a thin veneer of the
detective story. But don't be mistaken! Underneath the chatter and
cocktail parties, there's a genuine detective novel that would have
been more at home in 1938 rather than 1968. So definitely
recommended, but, depending on your personal taste, you might want to
begin with either Diplomatic Death or Diving Death.
Hold on! Just one more thing... Over
the past year, or two, I've come across three writers, Kip
Chase, Charles Forsyte and Jack
Vance (Sheriff Joe Bain series), who wrote a few traditional,
classically-styled detective novels in the 1960s and abandoned the
genre or stopped writing altogether. Does anyone know of any other
mystery writers from that period that fit the profile? I would like
to read more from this lost generation of Golden Age mystery writers.