Well,
it's that time of the year again. The yearly roundup of the best and
worst detective novels and short stories, past and present, read in
2021. Traditionally, the list is dominated by locked room mysteries
and the Golden Age detective stories, but the non-English
(untranslated) have a strong representation this year in addition to
a surprising number of rereads. So, in spite of my personal taste, a
very varied list and, hopefully, it will help fatten some of your
2022 wishlists.
So,
before running down the list, I want to wish you all a Merry
Christmas and a Happy 2022!
THE
BEST DETECTIVE NOVELS READ IN 2021:
About
the Murder of the Night Club Lady (1931) by Anthony
Abbot
One
of the best and strongest novels in the Thatcher Colt series. This
time, the Police Commissioner of Greater New York is faced with an
inexplicable murder in a top floor penthouse and a second body
miraculously materializing on the thoroughly searched, closely
guarded premise. A criminally underappreciated locked room mystery
blazing with all the ingenuity of the 1930s.
Operazakan
aratanaru satsujin (The New Kindaichi Files,
1994) by Seimaru Amagi
A
landmark story in The
Kindaichi Case Files franchise
as it marked Hajime Kindaichi's first return to Hotel Opera, on
Utashima Island, where he solved his first multi-murder case. Four
years later, the original theatrical hotel had been torn down and
rebuild to stage a new adaptation of The Phantom of the
Opera, but then a new murderer
takes the stage and crushes an actress underneath an enormous
chandelier in the auditorium – which had been completely locked up
at the time. A first-rate theatrical mysteries and one of my favorite
stories from the series.
Ikazuchi
matsuri satsujin jiken (Deadly Thunder,
1998) by Seimaru Amagi
A
relatively minor mystery novel and entry in the Kindaichi series, but
has an impressive, small-scale piece of world-building as Hajime
Kindaichi and Miyuki Nanase travel to a remote village to visit a
former classmate – a place with its own unique culture and
traditions. Such as the three-day Thunder Festival and a rare kind of
clay used for pottery. This provides the background for a cleverly
construed murder of the impossible variety involving something else
that made isolated village famous in certain circles. A wild variety
and sheer number of cicadas.
The
Mystery of the Disappearing Cat (1944) by Enid Blyton
Yes,
a children's detective story, but Blyton proved with The
Mystery of the Vanishing Thief (1950) and The
Rilloby Fair Mystery (1950) that she could plot. And knew how
to handle an impossible crime situation. The Mystery of the
Disappearing Cat belongs on that list as The Five Find-Outers and
Dog try to clear a friend under suspicion of having stole a
prize-winning cat. Not a problem that will fool any adult reader, but
fairly clued and perfectly suitable for its intended audience.
Surprisingly mature and unpleasant in some aspects.
The
Case of the Unfortunate Village (1932) by Christopher
Bush
A
surprisingly unassuming, character-driven, but still thoroughly
absorbing, story plotted around a series of incidents, personality
changes and accidents that have changed the mood in the village of
Bableigh for the worst. A very original, first-class village mystery.
The
Case of the Curious Client (1947) by Christopher Bush
One
of the more tidiest whodunits Bush wrote during the late '40s with a
solution that got more out of the plot than went into it, but the
story is also an interesting additional to the library of (post)
World War II mysteries with a plot rooted in the pre-war period. And
it's always a pleasure to see Travers reunited with Wharton.
The
Three Coffins (1935) by John Dickson Carr (a
reread)
This
is one of Carr's landmark novels and a monument of the locked room
mystery, but, over the past fifteen years, The Three Coffins
status as a classic underwent a devaluation as readers today find it
not very technically sound – missing the point completely. The
Three Coffins is the utterly bizarre and fantastic done right
with all the logic of a mad dream. An impressive juggling act, which
tiptoed across a slippery tightrope, reaching the end without the
very tricky, maze-like plot becoming an incomprehensible mess. This
is an almost otherworldly performance only few mystery writers are
capable of producing. Carr was one of them.
The
Problem of the Green Capsule (1939) by John Dickson
Carr (a reread)
A
double triumph as Carr demonstrated he didn't need seemingly
impossible crimes to create truly baffling, maze-like plots and
presented the reader here with a murder during a psychological
experiment to proof the unreliability of eyewitnesses – a murder
both witnessed and filmed. One of the pleasures of rereading Carr is
noticing how daringly he dangles clues or even the truth in front of
your eyes. Or simply admiring how he created a psychological blind
spot where he hid the murderer.
The
Libertines (1978) by Douglas Clark
An
earnest, rock-solid continuation of the Golden Age traditional, but
Clark disguised his traditionally-styled plots as contemporary police
procedurals. This time, George Masters and Bill Green have to bring
clarity to two closely-linked poisonings during a cricket fortnight
at a large farmhouse.
Golden
Rain (1980) by Douglas Clark
This
novel about the poisoning of the beloved headmistress and benevolent
dictator of Bramthorpe College for Girls begins slowly and delays the
most important plot-pieces until the second-half, but the end result
is excellent. Another neo-Golden Age detective novel masquerading as
a modern police procedural.
Murder
on the Orient Express (1934) by Agatha Christie (a
reread)
This
another one-time classic whose status has been called into question
during the internet era, but, to me, Murder on the Orient Express
is to the closed-circle whodunit Carr's The Three Coffins is
to the locked room mystery. The completely fantastical and
unbelievable done convincing with the most memorable cast of
characters and setting in the genre. So the plot had to fit such a
grand stage and assembly of characters. And it did!
Evil
Under the Sun (1941) by Agatha Christie (a reread)
One
of Christie's triumphant masterpieces that's often overshadowed by
her even bigger and more famous masterpieces, but Evil Under the
Sun is a first-rate entry in the Hercule Poirot series as his
holiday is cut short by the murder of a well-known actress – which
he neatly solves. Having read the novel before, I could sit back and
admire the brazen clueing and shrewd misdirection. She created an
apparently maze-like plot without an exit while the open door was in
plain sight the entire time!
Six
Against the Yard (1936) by The Detection Club
Technically,
this is a collection of short stories and should be mentioned below,
but it seemed to fit in better here as the stories form a very novel
collective. Six members of the London-based Detection Club, some
better known and remembered than others, match wits with
Superintendent Cornish. Can the real life detective unravel the
schemes of the Merchants of Murder? Superintendent Cornish was no
Lestrade and demonstrated the police has one advantage over the
amateur criminal: a ton of experience.
The
Reader is Warned (1939) by Carter Dickson (a
reread)
An
underrated, low-key masterpiece in which Sir Henry Merrivale is
confronted who claims to possess telepathic powers. Allowing him to
read minds, predict the future and kill with his mind. There are
several, seemingly inexplicable, deaths to back up his claim, but the
Old Man is not that easily tricked. A nigh perfectly plotted
detective novel and a masterclass in cavalier clueing and devious
misdirection!
Rechercheur
De Klerck en moord in scène (Inspector De
Klerck and Murder on the Scene, 2021) by P. Dieudonné
(untranslated)
I
was initially a little skeptical when the synopsis was released as
the plot is centered on a deadly rivalry between two rap groups in
Rotterdam, but Dieudonné proved in his previous four novels, like
Rechercheur
De Klerck en de ongrijpbare dood (Inspector De Klerck
and the Elusive Death, 2020), he was not another pale imitation
of the late Appie Baantjer. There's more rhyme and reason to the
seemingly ordinary and sordid crimes De Klerck and Klaver have under
investigation, which turn out to be set to a very familiar and
classical tune. A late-minute highlight of 2021!
Twenty-Five
Sanitary Inspectors (1935) by Roger East
The
last novel in a short-lived series of proto-police procedurals in
which the now retired ex-Superintendent Simmy Simmonds becomes
embroiled in sabotage, murder and political intrigue on a fictitious,
pocket-sized island republic in the West Indies – ruled over a by
generalissimo. During the first-half, the story appeared to go
nowhere with Simmonds' situation and his comic opera police force
being played for laughs, but the ending revealed a deviously planned
whodunit with an original motive.
The
Fortescue Candle (1936) by Brian Flynn
A
little loosely plotted in parts with one plot-thread annoyingly left
unresolved, but nonetheless a detective story as intriguing as it's
intricate with Flynn tying together the shooting of an unpopular Home
Secretary and the poisoning of a stage actress. While some parts were
better handled than others, the solution is far from disappointing
and an example why this has become a household series of Dean Street
Press.
The
Ebony Stag (1938) by Brian Flynn
Admittedly,
this is not the strongest title in the Anthony Bathurst series, but
it's a tremendously entertaining one and, surprisingly, contained a
locked room-puzzle not recorded in either Adey or Skupin. However,
the impossibility is only a small part of this old-fashioned whodunit
involving a very strange weapon, false-identities, hidden alibis,
coded messages and a historical mystery.
Glittering
Prizes (1942) by Brian Flynn
This
one is a perfect example of Flynn's versatility as both a plotter and
storyteller. A rich, elderly American widow who puts her entire
fortune at the disposal of the British Empire to combat the Nazi
menace. She handpicked nine men and women with outstanding public
records and put them through a test to see which two would receive a
small fortune to help protect their way of life, but the game turns
into a sensational murder case when the winners are found murdered
under bizarre circumstances. A case in point why Flynn has more than
deserving of being rediscovered.
Murder
and the Married Virgin (1944) by Brett Halliday
A
hard-paced, hardboiled private eye novel in which Mike Shayne is
hired by distraught army lieutenant to find out why his fiance
committed a suicide a day before they were to met at the altar. Or
was she perhaps murdered? One of the better attempts at the time at
combining the hardboiled private eye with the impossible crime. As
solid as a sock on the jaw!
La
toile de Pénélope
(Penelope's
Web,
2001) by Paul Halter
I've
been hoping and waiting for a translation of Penelope's Web ever
since reading Xavier enticing review
back in the late 2000s. So not only was it very satisfying to finally
have the book available in English, but it mostly lived up to my
expectations. A very well done, Agatha Christie-style whodunit with
an unusual impossible murder in a locked room with the open window
covered with an intricately-woven, unbroken web. My sole complaint is
that the second victim would have made a great (one-shot) detective
character.
La
maison interdite
(The
Forbidden House,
1932) by Michel Herbert & Eugène Wyl
Arguably
the best French-language locked room mystery novel from the 1930s and '40s to come out of John Pugmire's Locked
Room International.
A masterpiece worthy of the label that not only asks who, why and how
the crime was committed, but also who the detective is going to be. A
story curiously prescient of Leo Bruce's Case
for Three Detectives
(1936).
Blind
Man's Bluff
(1943)
by Baynard Kendrick
Baynard
Kendrick created a unique link between the comic book superhero and
capeless crusader from the pulp magazines of the 1940s in the guise
of a detective, Captain Duncan Maclain, who lost his eyesight during
the First World War and had a superhero-like training to become a
private eye – directly inspiring the creation of Daredevil. This
novel ranks with The
Whistling Hangman
(1937) as the best the series has to offer as Maclain has to contend
on his own with a string of suicides which were very likely disguised
murder. A pulp-style rendition of John Dickson Carr's The
Case of the Constant Suicides
(1941) with the only drawback being that it lacked the showmanship
and magical touch of the master.
The
Three Taps
(1927) by Ronald A. Knox
A
humorously written and cleverly plotted detective novel, crammed with
clues, detectives and false-solution, which read like a portent of
things to come and possibly influenced some of the celebrated British
mystery writers of the 1930s – like Anthony
Berkeley
and Leo
Bruce.
Only drawback is that one of the false-solution is somewhat better
than the actual solution.
Shijinso
no satsujin (Death Among the Undead,
2017) by Masahiro Imarura
A
modern classic that "made
enormous waves in the world of Japanese mystery fiction" by
blurring the lines between the detective and horror genres without
compromising the integrity of either. Death Among the Undead
is an ingenious, traditionally-plotted detective novel, but set
during a small, localized zombie apocalypse that added a new
dimension to both the closed-circle situation and locked room
mystery. A very rare success story of the hybrid mystery novel that
can only be likened to Isaac Asimov's The
Caves of Steel (1954).
A
Talent for War (1989) by Jack McDevitt
This
science-fiction series came to my attention because it was compared
to Ellery
Queen and McDevitt cited G.K.
Chesterton's Father Brown as a huge influence on it. Alex
Benedict is an antique dealer who solves historical mysteries ten
thousand years into the future when humanity had formed a troubled,
multi-world Confederacy. I loved the world-building with a
fascinating historical mystery surrounding 200-year-old lost warship.
Polaris
(2004) by Jack McDevitt
The
sequel to A Talent for War with more focus on the historical,
space-age mystery plot than world-building, which concerns the Mary
Celeste-like disappearance of a scientific expedition who were
observing the destruction of an ancient star system by a white dwarf.
But there's much more to this very tricky, complicated plot with a
truly horrifying crime at the heart of story.
The
Key to the Case (1992) by Roger Ormerod
This
criminally underrated entry in Ormerod's Richard and Amelia Patton
series represents his best attempt to consolidate the traditional,
plot-oriented detective story with the gritty, character-driven crime
novel of modern times – centering on the murder of a convicted
rapist and suspected murderer. A murder that took place in a
hermetically sealed, practically fortified house and the who is even
better than the how.
A
Shot at Nothing (1993) by Roger Ormerod
An
honest and successful attempt at imagining what the Golden Age
mystery novel would look like in the '90s and it feels like the
genuine article. There are some modern touches and smudges to the
plot, but, on a whole, it's very handled and particular the
impossible crime in combination with the second murder.
She
Had to Have Gas (1939) by Rupert Penny
There's
not much I can say to sum up this utterly strange detective novel
except to quote my own review, "one of the most delightfully
bizarre, ambitiously plotted and convoluted curiosities of the
genre's Golden Age."
The
Stolen Gold Affair (2020) by Bill Pronzini
There
are several plot-strands that make up this novel, but the one that
can be called "The Monarch Mine Case" is what earned the book a
spot on this list. John Quincannon goes both undercover and
underground to dismantle a high-grading operation, but finds himself
in a tight corner when an impossible murder occurs in a closely
watched crosscut. A mine is such a great setting for a detective
story!
Hoteldebotel
in een hotel (Pell-Mell in a Hotel,
2021) by Eugenius Quak (untranslated)
An
ambitious, madcap and pulp-style homage to Agatha Christie and Ellery
Queen in which outlaw detective and wanted fugitive, Eugenius M.
Quak, goes into hiding at his aunt's beach side hotel, De Rode Haring
(The Red Herring). Everything goes hilariously wrong when a guest
dies under suspicious circumstances and the hotel is overrun with
policemen, which forces Quak to do some highly unorthodox detective
work. This detective novel has everything. A plot stuffed to the
gills with clues, red herrings, false-solutions and challenges to the
reader, but everything fitted together logically and satisfactory in
spite of all the madcappery. What a shame neither the traditional nor
the pulp-style of detective fiction is so unpopular in my country.
The
Frightened Stiff (1942) by Kelley Roos (a reread)
This
is one of my all-time favorite comedic mysteries and should be the
measure stick of the murder-can-be-fun school. A genuinely funny
detective story in which the newlywed Jeff and Haila Troy overhear a
man in a telephone booth planning to meet someone in the basement of
the Greenwich Village apartment they moved into, which ends with a
body in their garden and police knocking on their door. Tom and Enid
Schantz wrote in their introduction that the series gives reader a
snapshot of "what it was like to be young and in love in the New
York of the 1940s" when "mysteries were meant to be fun,"
but it should not be overlooked the plots are generally better than
found in other series with bantering, mystery solving
husband-and-wife teams. So, yes, this one more than stood up to
rereading.
Lamb
to the Slaughter (1995) by Jennifer Rowe
The
last novel in the now largely forgotten, long out-of-print Verity
Birdwood series that admirably found a balance between the modern,
character-driven crime novel and the traditional detective story.
Lamb to the Slaughter has a modern exterior with its cast of
characters coming from the bottom rungs of society, who have to deal
with an unpleasant, recently freed murderer returning to their
neighborhood, but appearances can be deceiving – used here to both
hide a clever plot and misdirect the reader. A bright light in the
dim nineties of the traditional detective story.
The
Listening House (1938) by Mabel Seeley
Arguably
one of the strongest debuts from the American Golden Age and praised,
past and present, as "spirited
updating of the HIBK novel," but with a much grittier edge.
More importantly, it has a plot that twists, turns and coils like a
snake lost in a hedge-maze exposing the peril of being an amateur
detective along the way. The two well-done locked room mystery were
the icing on the cake.
De
moord op het sloependek (The Murder on the
Boat Deck, 1941) by Vanno (untranslated)
Only
a second-string detective novel compared to its American and British
contemporaries, but a surprising and welcome addition to the too
short list of genuine, Dutch-language Golden Age mystery. The story
takes place during a pleasure cruise in the Aegean Sea when a murder
of the impossible variety cuts short the holiday of Inspector Barry
D. Weston and that amateur detective of some notoriety, Charles
Venno.
Moord
onder astrologen (Murder Among Astrologists,
1963) by Ton Vervoort (untranslated)
Now
this was a pleasant surprise! I picked this barely remembered, long
out-of-print Dutch detective novel as a contrast to W.H. van
Eemlandt's astronomically-themed Dood
in schemer (Death in Half-Light, 1954), but, as Kacey
Crain pointed out in the comment-section, the story about the
pseudoscience turned out to be more rigorously plotted of the two –
a Dutch take on the American detective story of S.S. van Dine and
Ellery Queen. Complete with bizarre architecture, crackpot characters
and a dying message.
Moord
onder de mantel der liefde (Murder Under the
Mantle of Love, 1964) by Ton Vervoort (untranslated)
A
bizarrely structured detective novel that starts out as a fairly
convention whodunit with a murder among the members of an old,
dysfunctional Amsterdam family, but the second-half has the killer
cut loose from the closed-circle situation. What follows is a
parapsychological manhunt for a serial killer who targets the city's
invalids and future victims. Strangely enough, it actually worked!
The characters and situations made it an unmistakable, almost
stereotypical, Dutch detective story.
Murder
at Monk's Barn (1931) by Cecil Waye
Cecil
Waye is the least-known pseudonym of John Street, better known as
John Rhode and Miles Burton, who added four more titles to his
already impressive bibliography under the Waye name. However, the
Waye novels tend to lean more towards the thriller genre, but Murder
at Monk's Barn is straightforward, 1920s style mystery novel with a
brother-and-sister detective team investigating an impossible murder.
Catt
Out of the Bag (1939) by Clifford Witting
A
seasonal, more lighthearted offering from the humdrum and realists
school which appears to have a plot as unassuming as it looks
unexciting, pilfering of a collection box during Christmas, but
there's a fairly clued, solidly plotted detective story hiding
underneath it all – like a wrapped present. Just like presents,
you're best off knowing as little as possible before unwrapping it. A
perfect mystery for those cold, dark December days.
Mom
Meets Her Makes (1990) by James Yaffe
Not
your typical Christmas detective novel. No quiet, snowed-in mansion
in the British countryside where the stingy, hated family patriarch
is murdered, but an American town loudly decorated from end to
another – complete with gunfire, small town politics and religious
strife. A classic play on the dying message trope and the multi
false-solutions makes this a first-rate, EQ-style detective novel.
THE
BEST SHORT STORIES READ IN 2021 (collections):
The
Island of Coffins and Other Mysteries from the Casebook of Cabin B-13
(2021) by
John Dickson Carr
"The
Man Who Couldn't Be Photographes"
"The
Blind-Folded Knife Thrower"
"No
Useless Coffin"
"The
Power of Darkness"
"The
Street of the Seven Daggers"
"The
Island of Coffins"
"Lair
of the Devil-Fish"
"The
Man with Two Heads"
Meer
mysteries voor Robbie Corbijn (More
Mysteries for Robbie Corbijn, 2021) by Anne van Doorn
(untranslated)
"The
Letters That Spelled Doom"
"The
Painting That Didn't Hang Around"
"The
Pianist Who Fell Out of Tune"
"The
House That Brought Bad Luck"
"The
Man Who Wanted Fly"
"The
Bus That Went into the Fog"
"The
Man Who Rather Stayed Inside"
The
Christmas Card Crime and Other Stories (2018) edited
by Martin Edwards
Selwyn
Jepson's "By the Sword"
Carter
Dickson's "Blind Man's Hood"
Ronald
A. Knox's "The Motive"
Cyril
Hare's "Sister Bessie or Your Old Leech"
John
Bude's "Pattern of Revenge"
John
Bingham's "Crime at Lark Cottage"
Locked
and Loaded, Part 2
Edgar
D. Smith's "Killer in Khaki"
Bruce
D. Pelletier's "The Hedgehog and the Fox"
Don
Knowlton's "The Room at the End of the Hall"
Edward
D. Hoch's "The Weapon Out of the Past"
THE
BEST SINGLE SHORT STORIES READ IN 2021:
G.K.
Chesterton and Max Pemberton's "The
Donnington Affair" (1914)
Simon
Clark's "The
Climbing Man" (2015)
Joseph
Commings' "The
Grand Guignol Caper" (1984)
Carter
Dickson's "The
Silver Curtain" (1939)
Martin
Edwards' "The
House of the Red Candle" (2004)
Edward
D. Hoch's "The
Spy and the Snowman" (1980)
Edward
D. Hoch's "The
Bad Samaritan" (1981)
Matt
Ingwalson's "Not
With a Bang" (2016)
Gerald
Kersh's "Karmesin
and the Meter" (1937)
John
Sladek's "Scenes
from the Country of the Blind" (1977)
THE
WORST/DISAPPOINTING READS OF 2021:
Voodoo
(1930) by John Esteven
A
mystery novel that sounded and began promising enough, but an
indecisive, directionless writer plunged the story to the ranks of
overly cliched, third-rate pulp fiction. What killed the story was
the incomprehensibly idiotic solution to the impossible murder that
can cause a brain aneurysm. The reader has been warned!
Na
afloop moord (Afterwards, Murder,
1953) by Bob van Oyen (untranslated)
A
so-called military mystery set among the engineering officers of the
Genie-bureau and had a premise with potential, but completely
dissolved as a detective story as the non-existence of the plot
became painfully obvious. No idea how it earned this place in a
detective story competition with 169 other entries. However, I did
enjoy skimming over my review and read back all the brilliant
armchair detective work that went nowhere. That name-clue would have
been really clever!
Pink
Silk Alibi (1946) by Bruce Sanders
An
amusingly enough written crime novel full with bantering, smart-aleck
dialogue and humor, which certainly went a long way in covering up
the fact that the plot is practically non-existent. Nothing more than
a bit of fluff demonstrating why some writers or novels went down
into obscurity.