Traditionally,
I begin my annual best/worst list with respectfully acknowledging the
passing of another year, but when I got here, I found 2020 crumpled
on the floor with half-a-dozen knives, daggers and arrows sticking
out of its back. I counted at least eight bullet holes, the severed
head was beaten to a bloody pulp and caught the distinct smell of
bitter almonds. All of you sitting here with angelic expressions on
your faces and blood-drenched clothes, looking all innocent and pure.
Well, I suppose we can sweep this one under the carpet as an
unfortunate accident or elaborate suicide before going over the list.
A
list dominated by the 1930s and '40s, but the 1960s and '90s have a
surprisingly strong representation on this year's list with the 1950s
having to take a step back. But not as much as the Japanese honkaku
and shin honkaku detective story, which are represented by a single
novel and six short stories. Something that needs to be remedied in
2021. One thing that remained pretty much the same is the locked room
mystery and impossible crime story dominating the entire list. So
let's go down the list.
Click
on the book titles to read the full review.
THE
BEST DETECTIVE NOVELS READ IN 2020:
The
Longstreet Legacy (1951) by Douglas Ash
A
highlight of the impossible crime story of both the 1950s and 2020! A
notorious, elderly New York recluse, Ella Longstreet, is found under
bizarre circumstances in the long hallway of her gloomy mansion. Ella
Longstreet's emaciated body is dressed in a skimpy bikini and there's
a circle of footprints around the body, but the dust everywhere in
the hallway is undisturbed! A splendidly done homage to the
turn-of-the-century, Gothic tale of long-held secrets, family
skeletons and an original impossible crime.
Away
Went the Little Fish (1946) by Margot Bennett
I
found an old copy of a Dutch translation of this long out-of-print
mystery. A witty, lighthearted take on both the comedic and the more
sophisticated British detective novels by Edmund Crispin and Michael
Innes. A little over written in parts, yes, but the result is a
thoroughly amusing whodunit with a locked room angle as a bonus.
The
Three Tiers of Fantasy (1947) by Norman Berrow
An
incredibly entertaining, pulp-style mystery caper in which a man, a
whole room, a roadhouse and even entire passages of time miraculously
vanish into thin air! Solutions to all of these impossible problems
aren't as imaginative as their premises, but that doesn't diminish
the fact that this was a great read.
The
Case of the Seven of Cavalry (1937) by Anthony Boucher
An
ambitious and promising all-out debut detective story from respected
genre critic and science-fiction author, Anthony
Boucher, who would go on to show more restrained in better or
more iconic novels. But this little college murder mystery radiates
with the spirit of the Grandest Game in the World. An understandable
fan favorite that comes highly recommended.
Voorzichtig
behandelen (Handle with Care,
1948) by E.R. Brent
This
is the only novel-length detective story Brent contributed to the
genre and lacks the polish of an experienced hand, but it was a
pleasure to read an authentic, Golden Age detective novel in my own
language. I'm going to try to find more of them in 2021.
The
Case of the Counterfeit Colonel (1952) by Christopher
Bush
Another
gratifying job from one of the most reliable detective novelist of
the period with a deceiving uncomplicated front. Ludovic Travers
accepts a routine assignment to help find a man who disappeared a
long time ago, which naturally leads to the discovery of a fresh
corpse. Solution hinges on weighing the evidence of a fabricated
alibi against an incriminating fingerprint. What really earned this
book a spot on the list is that Bush got more out of plot than was
put into it. That's something to be admired in a mystery writer.
The
Strange Case of the Barrington Hills Vampire (2020) by
James Scott Byrnside
James
Scott Byrnside is the antidote to the misery of the modern crime
novel and his third novel is a prequel to his previous two novels,
Goodnight
Irene (2018) and The
Opening Night Murders
(2019), which brings his series-detectives to a remote, untamed area
of Illinois – where they have to stop a murderer who can apparently
walk on snow without leaving footprints. So, while it's an impossible
crime novel, it actually works better as a pure, neo-orthodox
whodunit that continues the traditions of the Golden Age. Only
drawback to having a writer, like Byrnside, is that you actually have
to wait a year for his next novel, but that sort of adds to the GAD
experience.
Death
for Madame (1946) by R.T. Campbell
This
is easily the best and funniest of the comedic mystery novels about
Campbell's John Dickson Carr-inspired detective, Professor John
Stubbs, who's a large, mustachioed man who smokes black,
vile-smelling tobacco and all the tact of an 18th bone saw – told
by his long-suffering chronicler, Max Boyle. On top of that, it's
also one of the funniest take on the hotel-set mystery novel.
Sudden
Death (1932) by Freeman Wills Crofts
Crofts
is usually associated with three things: timetables, trains and
unbreakable alibis, but on two occasions, he turned his technical
expertise to the locked room mystery. Unfortunately, those two novels
have been out-of-print for decades and secondhand copies expensive.
This year, Sudden Death (1932) finally made its way back into
print and finds Inspector French investigating two murders cleverly
disguised as suicide in sealed rooms. Crofts handled the locked room
with the same expertise as the cast-iron alibi.
The
Hog's Back Mystery (1933) by Freeman Wills Crofts
An
intelligently and meticulously plotted detective novel in which
Inspector Joseph French stubbornly keeps plugging away at the problem
of a series disappearances in the heart of wild Surrey. The
ever-developing plot and expanding number of combinations and
possibilities and clear logic made this engaging read.
The
Worm Tunnel (1999) by Michael Dahl
The
second title in the juvenile adventure/mystery series about
13-year-old Finnegan “Finn” Zwake and his mystery writing uncle,
which is best described as a cross between Gosho Aoyama's Case
Closed and The Real Adventures of Jonny Quest. Story
takes place in a fictitious, Central American country where they
become involved in an archaeological search for prehistoric eggs, but
then a dinosaur is murdered under seemingly impossible circumstances
– stabbed inside a sealed, high-tech tent. Yes, The Worm Tunnel
earned its spot on the strength and originality of the locked
room-trick.
Rechercheur
De Klerck en de ongrijpbare dood (Inspector
De Klerck and the Elusive Death, 2020) by P. Dieudonné
Not
your typical Dutch politieroman (police novel) which, as a
rule as, place storytelling ahead of the plot, but Dieudonné went
all out in his third novel with no less than three impossible
disappearances and reappearances! A body vanishes from a burning
building under lock-and-key and a mysterious motorcyclist is
performing death defying stunts with the police close on his wheels.
But miraculously vanishes every time they think they've trapped, or
cornered, him. Such as disappearing from a sealed tunnel and
rematerialization behind the police cordon. I want to read more of
this in my own language!
Murder
on the Tropic (1935) by Todd Downing
A
blisteringly written, leisurely plotted regional mystery which takes
place at a remote, isolated hacienda tucked away in a mountain pocket
on the Tropic of Cancer – where people mysteriously fall ill or
die. Only drawback is that seasoned mystery readers will have no
problem in figuring out who's behind the murders. Nevertheless, it's
a great summer read!
The
Last Trumpet (1937) by Todd Downing
This
was Downing's redemption arc! Downing had repelled me with the
disgustingly overpraised The Cat Screams (1934), but The
Last Trumpet is a triumph of the regional mystery novel with a
hectic plot that turned to be pretty solid in the end.
The
Padded Door (1932) by Brian Flynn
Flynn's
brilliant and staggering contribution to the classic courtroom drama
with the murder, arrest, trial and verdict serving as a long prologue
to the second half, but how the first and second were tied together
proved Flynn was a master of his craft – punctuated with one of the
most audacious solutions of the period. A solution that almost
beggars belief!
The
Edge of Terror (1932) by Brian Flynn
Somewhat
of a fairground ride of a novel in which an elusive serial killer,
“The Eagle,” preys on the increasingly more panicky citizens of a
small English town. This is one of Flynn's pulp-style detective
novels reminiscent of John
Russell Fearn complete with a cinema murder and trampled piece of
candy as a clue. I enjoyed it from start to finish.
Fear
and Trembling (1936) by Brian Flynn
One
of Flynn's ten best novels and another one of his tributes to Conan
Doyle and the gaslight era of crime fiction, but he has one hell of a
trick up his sleeve. Something you come to expect from the best of
the 1930s and demonstrated that the rules of the detective story can
only be broken, twisted or subverted by people who understand and
respect them.
Diplomatic
Death (1961) by Charles Forsyte
Gordon
and Vicky Philo were the husband-and-wife writing tandem behind the
penname “Charles Forsyte” and they're my favorite discovery of
2020, but sadly, they only wrote a handful of detective novels –
three of which feature their series-character, Inspector Richard
Left, of Special Branch. Diplomatic Death brings him to the
British Consulate-General in Istanbul, Turkey, where the Consul
General apparently committed suicide and then proceeded to
vanish into thin air! A splendidly done throwback to the 1930s
mystery novel with a vividly depicted backdrop.
Diving
Death (1962) by Charles Forsyte
Inspector
Richard Left is on a much deserved holiday when he becomes involved
with an archaeological expedition to the recently discovered, spongy
remains of an ancient Greek shipwreck where Roman coins had been
found. But his holiday is totally ruined when one of the divers is
harpooned under seemingly impossible circumstances. Another winner
filled alibis, clues, false solution and a very fallible detective.
Murder
with Minarets (1968) by Charles Forsyte
Diplomatic
Death and Diving Death are purely plot-driven affairs, but
Murder with Minarets is a character-driven mystery, in the
style of Agatha
Christie, which takes place inside the domestic and social bubble
of the British Embassy staff in Ankara, Turkey. Clues are cleverly
dropped in casual conversations or meaningless patter. So my
suspicion is that Vicky had bigger hand in the plotting/writing, but
the solution had a surprisingly technical aspect and betrayed that
this was not a solo effort. Either way, they deserve to be reprinted.
The
Devil Drives (1932) by Virgil Markham
I
described The Devil Drives in my review as a bundle of
contradictions with a loose, episodic plot stitched together with a
string of coincidences and there's no earthly reason why it should
have worked, but, somehow, it worked surprisingly well – topped
with a very unusual locked room-trick.
The
Sulu Sea Murders (1933) by Van Wyck Mason
A
highly readable combination of the traditional, plot-driven detective
story and the pulp-style adventure thriller in which Captain Hugh
North chases the murderer of pearl diver to a military island
fortress. A place that soon becomes the scene of a manhunt and an
impossible murder at the top of a guarded tower. So far my favorite
in the series!
The
Whistling Legs (1945) by Roman McDougald
A
textbook example of how to erect a twisted, maze-like plot crawling
with solid shadows, a rival detective, a frightened cat and seemingly
impossible crimes – blending the hardboiled with the plot-driven
detective story along the way. There even was a particular clever
reason why the detective had to be knocked unconscious.
Policeman
in Armour (1937) by Rupert Penny
Penny's
redemption! Sealed Room Murder (1949) was an atrociously
paced, tortuous to read mystery, but Policeman in Armour
showed Penny as an old-fashioned craftsman who constructed a
maze-like plot around a quasi-impossible stabbing. A crime in which
the murderer had plot a path through, or pass, doors with noisy
locks, closed windows, occupied rooms and ticking clocks. So not a
bad penny after all.
Original
Sin (1991) by Mary Monica Pulver
This
novel was spotlighted by Brian Skupin in Locked Room Murders:
Supplement (2019) as a rarity of the 1990s, a good locked room
mystery, but what Pulver wrote was so much more than merely an
impossible crime novel. Original Sin appears on the surface to
be one of those many, often futile attempts at recreating the
snowbound country house mystery, but Pulver actually succeeded in
summoning the spirit of the Golden Age. You can feel its present
throughout the story and how it interacts with the present day
plot-threads is a work of art.
The
Heel of Achilles (1950) by E. and M.A. Radford
Unlike
the previous entries in the series, the eighth Dr. Harry Manson novel
is an inverted mystery with the first part showing what lead up to
the murder and the second half detailing the impersonal police
investigation. The Heel of Achilles is one of the most
intelligently plotted inverted mysteries demonstrated that every
contact leave traces. No matter how hard the murderer tried to alter
or erase those traces.
Death
at the Château Noir (1960) by E. and M.A. Radford
An
ancient, unseen evil is held responsible for the deaths of a
succession owners of a black, ugly looking château on the French
Riviera, but Dr. Harry Manson finds a murderer of flesh-and-blood. A
murderer who found an ingenious way to dispatch an entire family. One
of the last glowing embers on the hearth of the Golden Age and as
good as anything by John
Rhode. Good news: Dean Street Press seems to have plans to
reprint this one.
The
Bloody Tower (1938) by John Rhode
Rhode
was the Engineer of Crime and there's an example of his craftsmanship
within the pages of The Bloody Tower, but this time, Rhode
dispenses with the technical how-was-it-done to treat his readers to
a pure whodunit with a cleverly executed historical plot-thread –
concerning an 18th century code and a gloomy tower. Very Carr-like
without having to lean on an impossible crime to do so!
The
Woman in the Wardrobe (1951) by Peter Shaffer
A
long out-of-print, eagerly sought after collector's item with an
almost mythical reputation as both a clever parody of the detective
story and a brilliant locked room mystery, which is more often than
not a recipe for bitter disappointment. The Woman in the Wardrobe
actually lived up to expectations and the only thing that can be held
against it is its shortness, but even that was somewhat remedied with
sketched of all the characters by Nicholas Bentley (son of E.C.
Bentley). A bright spot in an otherwise abysmal year. Hopefully,
the equally obscure, hard-to-get Withered
Murder (1955) will be reprinted next year.
The
Death of Laurence Vining (1928) by Alan Thomas
The
Death of Laurence Vining is another elusive, long out-of-print
detective novel with a tantalizing reputation as an original locked
room mystery with a brilliant spin on Sherlock Holmes. I can tell you
it more than lives up to its reputation. A Sherlock Holmes-like
figure is murdered while traveling alone in a moving, closely watched
elevator and it falls to his Watson to help the police find the
murderer. Good news! Curt Evans announced in the comments of my
review that he has “plans
afoot to get
all his books back in print.”
The
Joe Bain Mysteries (1966-67) by Jack Vance.
The
tragedy of my second favorite discovery of 2020, Jack Vance's
short-lived Sheriff Joe Bain series, is that they were written a good
twenty years too late. The
Fox Valley Murders (1966) and The
Pleasant Grove Murders (1967) gives the reader a glimpse what
the genre would have looked like, if the Golden Age had continued
into the 1960s and beyond – which adds Vance to the Lost Generation
who were briefly active in the sixties. Such as Kip
Chase and Charles
Forsyte. Vance's bare bones plot outline/unfinished manuscript,
“The
Genesee Slough Murders” (1966), could have been another winner
with a kicker of a motive.
Death
Knell (1990) by Nicholas Wilde
An
unexpected and surprising discovery! A locked room murder mystery for
teenagers written in the spirit of John
Dickson Carr, Paul
Halter and Derek
Smith. Two 14-year-old boys, Tim and Jamie, spend the winter
holiday in old-world Norfolk. They become involved in a strange case
when they find a body in a haunted crypt with the door not only
locked from the inside, but blocked by a giant stone with a legend
attached to it. This is easily one of the best juvenile locked room
mysteries I've read to date and deserves to be reprinted.
Honjin
satsujin jiken (The Honjin Murders,
1946) by Seishi Yokomizo
The
eagerly, long-awaited second translation of the giant of the honkaku
era and a classic of the Japanese locked room mystery, which also
marks the first appearance of his iconic detective, Kosuke Kindaichi.
A problem concerning the slaughter of a groom and his bride on their
wedding night in a building surrounded by untouched snow with a
brilliantly tricky solution. Japanese may have arrived relatively
late on the scene, but when they picked up steam, they performed
miracles with the detective story. And they're still in their Second
Golden Age!
THE
BEST SHORT STORIES READ IN 2020 (collections):
The
Bullet from Beyond and Other Ben Snow (a selection) by
Edward D. Hoch
“The Headless Horseman of Buffalo Creek”
“The Daughters of Crooked River”
“The San Augustin Miracle”
The
Helm of Hades
(2019) by Paul Halter
“The Ladder of Jacob”
“The Scarecrow's
Revenge”
“The Yellow Book”
“The
Robber's Grave”
Hoch's
Ladies (2020) by Edward D. Hoch
“A Parcel of Deerstalkers”
“An Abundance of Airbags”
“A Shower of Daggers”
“The Invisible Intruder”
“The Cactus Killer”
Locked
and Loaded (a selection)
H.C. Kincaid's “Murder
on a Bet”
Francis
Bonnamy's “The Loaded House”
Charles
B. Child's “The Thumbless Man”
David
Braly's “The Gallowglass”
The
Red Locked Room (2020) by Tetsuya Ayukawa
“The White Locked Room”
“Whose Body?”
“Death in Early Spring”
“The Clown in the Tunnel”
“The Red Locked Room”
SINGLE
SHORT STORIES:
Anthony
Abbot's “About
the Disappearance of Agatha King” (1932)
Jerry
Coleman's “The
Super-Key to Fort Superman” (1958)
MORI
Hiroshi's “Sekitō
no yane kazan” (“The Rooftop Ornaments of Stone Ratha,”
1999)
Edward
D. Hoch's “The
Flying Fiend” (1982)
Edward
D. Hoch's “The
Theft of the White Queen's Menu” (1983)
Louis
L'Amour's “The
Hills of Homicide” (1948)
Thomas
Narcejac's “L'orchideé
rouge” (“The Red Orchid,” 1947)
Arthur
Porges' “In
Compartment 813” (1966)
Bill
Pronzini and Jeffrey Wellmann's “The
Half-Invisible Man” (1974)
Mike
Wiecek's “The
End of the Train” (2007)
THE
WORST OR MOST DISAPPOINTING READS OF 2020:
De
hond was executeur (The Dog Was Executor,
1973)
I
hunted down a copy on the strength of the cover art, which suggested
an impossible crime, but it turned out to be an anti-detective story
with a social conscience. So it left me both disappointed and
dissatisfied, but had fun constructing my own locked room situation
and solution from the various story-and plot elements.
Death
Under the Moonflower (1939) by Todd Downing
I
was unable to finish this mind-numbingly boring, atrociously paced
story.
The
Five Red Fingers (1929) by Brian Flynn
Flynn
is one of the most important rediscoveries of the past few years, but
The Five Red Fingers was disappointing with too many red
herrings smothering the genuine clues and a coincidence-laden
explanation with one of them bordering on an Act of God – ruining a
detective story that started out promising enough. So don't start
here when you decide to pick up this excellent series.
The
Rotary Club Murder Mystery (1993) by Graham Landru
Admittedly,
this one started out promising with its multiple narrators and an
88-year-old widow, Mrs. Harriet Bushrow, investigating an apparent
suicide in a chain-bolted motel room, but ended in disaster with both
the author and cover artist lying to the reader. Even by 1990s
standards, The Rotary Club Murder Mystery is a poor specimen
of the locked room mystery.
Demons'
Moon (1951) by Colin Robertson
A
good example of a bad detective novel and why some writers are
forgotten today, which came to my attention through an error in Brian
Skupin's Locked Room Murders: Supplement (2019). I livened up
my review with a short overview of obscure, odd and anomalous entries
in Skupin.
I
wish everyone of you a Merry Christmas!