Last
year, Nick Fuller, of The
Grandest Game in the World, compiled a list of "what
detective stories should be reprinted"
and posted the result under the title "Detective
Stories to Reprint" covering a who's who of obscure, long
out-of-print mystery writers and detective novels – a list going
from Hugh Austin's Murder
of a Matriarch
(1936) to R.C. Woodthorpe's The
Public School Murder
(1932). One or two items on Nick's list were already back in print
and James Quince's The
Tin Tree
(1930) and Casual
Slaughters
(1935) have since been reissued as ebooks.
I
decided to put together a selection of obscure, shamefully
out-of-print detective novels and mystery writers, which aroused my
curiosity over the years as an addendum to Nick's list. I tried to
keep the overlap between both lists as small as possible and an
attempt was made to not let the locked room mystery dominate the
list, but hey, you know me. So here's a small selection, in
completely random order, put together according to the magpie's
method (Ooh, shiny objects).Nearly
a decade ago, Curt Evans favorably discussed Invitation
to Kill
(1937) by "Gardner Low," a pseudonym of Charles Rodda, who wrote Edgar
Wallace-style thrillers under the name "Gavin Holt," but
Invitation to
Kill is "a
rather fascinating" detective novel – possessing "fair
play plotting, wit aplenty and a felicitous style."
Curt ended the review with "an
invitation to republish,"
but nothing has materialized ten years later.
The
Anthony Boucher Chronicles: Reviews and Commentary, 1942-47
(2001/09) is a treasure trove to pad out lists, like these, but one
review that has always stood out to me is Marion K. Sanders and
Mortimer S. Edelstein's The Bride Laughed Once (1943).
Alternatively published as Death Wears Skis in the 1951 Winter
issue of 2 Detective Mystery Novels Magazine. Boucher praised
the story about the stabbing of a playboy at a ski resort as "a
thoroughly sound detective in the classical mold” strongly
recommended "to the formally puzzle-minded and to fans of winter
sports." Sounds like a gem of a whodunit waiting to be
rediscovered!
On
the very same page of The
Anthony Boucher Chronicles,
there's a review of Ruth
Darby's Murder
with Orange Blossoms
(1943) about ex-detective Peter Barron and narrator-wife Janet
investigate the murder of a bride – who drops dead en route to the
altar. Boucher called the book "slick
and relentlessly amusing"
with a Long Island society setting. Something tells me Murder
with Orange Blossoms
could be in the same league as The
Frightened Stiff
(1942) and Sailor,
Take Warning!
(1944) by Kelley
Roos. I would also like to see Darby's Death
Boards the Lazy Lady
(1939) and Death
Conducts a Tour
(1940), If This
Be Murder
(1941) and Beauty
Sleep (1942)
return to print. What a shame Rue Morgue Press closed down, because
Darby sounds like the kind of mystery writer they would have loved to
reprint.
Speaking
of Rue Morgue Press, when they closed down, they left behind several
obscure, but great, mystery writers who were never picked up by other
publishers. Clyde
B. Clason is a notable example who was only two reprints away to
have had all his detective novels brought back in print. I would very
much like to add copies of Clason's The
Fifth Tumbler
(1936) and The
Whispering Ear
(1938) to my (locked room) library. Same goes for Glyn
Carr. I really looked forward to the RMP reprints of A
Corpse at Camp Two
(1954), Murder
of an Owl
(1956), The Ice
Axe Murders
(1958) and Lewker
in Tirol (1967)
that would never come.Horatio
Winslow and Leslie Quirk's Into
Thin Air
(1928) and Anthony and Peter Shaffer's Withered
Murder (1956)
can be counted among the most well-known of the elusive locked room
mystery novels, which have been out-of-print for decades and
available copies tend to cost a leg and an arm. John Norris, of
Pretty Sinister Books, praised Withered
Murder as "a
diabolically clever and often sardonically funny murder mystery"
deserving of being reprinted, while the Death
Can Read
blog declared
Into Thin Air
"mandatory
for those who love the genre."
All we need is a kindly publisher to provide us with freshly printed
copies.
The
blog of John Norris has three tags, "bizarre
murder methods," "neglected
detectives" and "obscure
writers," representing another treasure trove of long-forgotten
mystery writers and detective novels that have been out-of-print for
a very long time – sometimes the better part of a century. Some of
the mysteries John discussed stood out more than others. One of those
standouts is Frederica de Laguna's academic mystery novel, The
Arrow Points to Murder
(1937), which "makes
use of anthropological forensic science and unusual poison
experiments in a way like no other detective novel."
And the storytelling "replete
with anthropological lectures, curious tidbits and tangential
scientific trivia all related to museum work."
Such an intelligent, absorbing piece of detective fiction needs to be
reprinted! Sue MacVeigh's Murder
Under Construction
(1939) caught my attention for the same reason as Darby's Murder
with Orange Blossoms,
but also for its setting and authentic background in civil
engineering. That makes her second and third novels, Grand
Central Murder
(1939) and Streamlined
Murder (1940),
all the more enticing. Reginald Davis and his only three detective
novels have become pretty obscure over the decades, but John's
reviews of The
Crowing Hen
(1936) and Nine
Days' Panic
(1937) argue a good case for reprinting. Same goes for Robert Hare's
"three
works of ingenious crime fiction"
and John Donovan's short-lived Sgt.
Johnny Lamb series and his standalone mystery, The
Dead Have No Friends
(1952). I could go on mentioning writers discussed on Pretty Sinister
Books, like Charles
Ashton, Christopher
Hale and Victor
Luhrs, but you get the idea.
Lester
Heath's The Case
of the Aluminum Crutch
(1963) is a
juvenile mystery and the only published account from The Casebook
of "Sherlock" Jones, which appears on the surface to be standard
story of this kind with a Sherlockian touch, but a teaser of the plot
suggests otherwise ("the
boy's crutch lay at the foot of the tree. The door to the tree house
was locked—from the inside. Yet no one was there").
The only review
that can be found online compares the book to The
Three Investigator
series and how "Sherlock" Jones can pass for a cousin Jupiter
Jones. And that should be more than enough to get Jim's attention.
Eunice
Mays Boyd was an American writer who wrote only three detective
novels, Murder
Breaks Trail
(1943), Doom in
the Midnight Sun
(1944) and Murder
Wears Mukluks
(1945), which are all set in Alaska with "its
ghosttowns, its echoes of the rugged goldrush era and its eerie
midnight sun"
– all three strike me as potential gems of the regional mystery
novel. So was Boyd the Elspeth
Huxley or Arthur
Upfield of Alaska? A fresh print-run could answer that question.During
the early days of this blog, I reviewed a truly weird locked room
mystery, Joseph B. Carr's The
Man With Bated Breath
(1934), which reads like an alternate universe version of John
Dickson Carr and has a bizarro world, pot-smoking rendition of
Dr. Gideon Fell as the detective. Some thought it might actually be a
hitherto unknown Carr novel and it wouldn't have been the first time
one turned up (e.g. Devil
Kinsmere,
1934), but Douglas Greene argued against the possibility.
Unfortunately, his comments posted on the old GADetection Group have
since fallen prey to internet decay. I'm still very curious about
Joseph B. Carr's first detective novel, Death
Whispers
(1933). Now that the real Carr is returning to print, The
Man With Bated Breath
and Death
Whispers make
for interesting companion pieces.
Anthony
Berkeley and Mignon
G. Eberhart have been slipping in-and out-of-print for the past
two decades, but Berkeley's Top
Storey Murder
(1931) and Eberhart's From
This Dark Stairway
(1931) continue to elude me. I have good hope Top
Storey Murder
will eventually get published again as part of the British Library
Crime Classics series, but From
This Dark Stairway
is probably going to be a different story.
It's
an old, tired running joke around these parts Jim and I agree about
once or twice a month, if that. So following up on any of his
recommendations is always a risky venture, but I can't deny his
reviews of James
Ronald, "a
writer of no small talent,"
has failed to intrigue me. Slapping four-star and five-star ratings
on Six
Were to Die
(1932), Murder
in the Family
(1936), They
Can't Hang Me
(1938) and This
Way Out
(1939). James Ronald strikes me as being in the same category as
other pulp writers, like Theodore
Roscoe, who wrote some first-rate detective fiction and reprints
will be welcomes with open arms. He also wrote the
tantalizingly-titled The
Sealed Room Murder
(1934), under the name Michael Crombie, which is another one that
needs to be republished.
Val
Gielgud was an actor, director, broadcaster and mystery novelist
who was "a
pioneer of radio drama for the BBC"
and "directed
the first ever drama to be produced in the newer medium of
television,"
which provided an authentic backdrop to a number of his detective
novels – like Death
at Broadcasting House
(1934) and The
First Television Murder
(1940). So you would think that would be enough to keep at least his
radio-and television themed mysteries in print, but the last time
Death at
Broadcasting House
appeared in print was a 1994 large print edition. Most of his other
novels have (I think) never been reprinted. Another early media
mystery that probably merits reprinting is The
Studio Murder Mystery
(1929) by A.C.
and Carmen Edington. An American husband-and-wife team who wrote
three more mysteries, Murder
to Music
(1930), The
Monkshood Murders (1931)
and Drum Madness
(1934), which have not been reprinted since their original
publication. For the same reason, I would like to see reprints of
Alfred
Eichler's Murder
in the Radio Department
(1943) and Death
at the Mike
(1946).
I
can't remember how Basil
Francis
came to my attention, but he was theatrical manager and historian
(Fanny
Kelly of Drury Lane,
1950) who wrote eight detective novels between 1935 and 1954. Francis
appears to be fairly typical example of one those little-known, now
completely forgotten Golden Age writers who wrote mysteries with such
titles as The
Holiday Camp Murder
(1939), Death
on the Roof
(1946) and Death
on the Atoll
(1948). But his last novel might turn out to be an interesting piece
of meta-fiction and genre commentary. Apparently, Death
in Act IV
(1954) is a published stage play (never performed?) concerning the
six members of the London Crime Circle. So a potentially interesting
name for the British Library or Dean Street Press to rescue from
biblioblivion.
H.C.
Branson
is another writer who's completely forgotten today, but he's supposed
to be good a writer and plotter with The
Pricking Thumb
(1942) and The
Case of the Giant Killer
(1942) apparently being among his better works.I
tried to not to let the locked room mystery and impossible crime
genre dominate the list, but it would foolish to pretend Robert
Adey's Locked Room Murders
(1991) and Brian Skupin's Locked Room
Murders: Supplement (2019) aren't the
paper and ink incarnation of my wishlist. So let's go over some
choices highlighted and listed in Adey and Skupin. Oh, come on, you
knew it was coming! Yes, I'll try to keep it as brief as possible.
Adey
listed some truly obscure, rarely reprinted writers and novels in his
introduction. The first title is a very early one, Fred
M. White's "Who Killed James Trent?" (1901), which was serialized in
Pearson's
Weekly
and has "a
rising young novelist,"
Jasper Carr, acting as detective. Adey called it "an
amazing coincidence and an unconscious pointer to an author yet to
come."
The story should be in the public domain, but is nowhere to be found
online while a lot of White's other fiction is easily
accessible.
Typical! Another intriguing-sounding locked room mystery that's in
the public domain and nowhere to be found is W.A. Mackenzie's Flower
O' the Peach
(1916). One of those exceedingly rare WWI era mysteries! Charles
Chadwick's The
Cactus
(1925) and The
Moving House Foscaldo
(1926), "both
are well worth reading,"
can be added to the list of (possible) public domain works missing in
action. Scobie
Mackenzie's Three
Dead, One Hurt
(1934) is "an
almost Buchanesque tale of an oddly assorted group of people marooned
on a Scottish island"
with a "clever
locked room situation" marking
it out "as something a little different."
Francis Leslie's Study
of Death
(1943) merited a special mention on account of "a
genuinely clever and original locked room gimmick."
There are over 2000 entries in Locked
Room Murders
and not everyone was specially mentioned in the introduction, but
some nevertheless stood out to me for one reason or another.
The
first item listen in Locked
Room Murders
can almost be described as a glitch in the matrix, Jacques Aanrooy's
Off
the Track
(1895), in which Donald Fraser solves a stabbing in a locked surgery
and was published in South Africa by J.C. Juta & Co – which
makes entry 1098 a little spooky. Sir Henry Juta's Off
the Track
(1925) has a detective, named Ronald Fraser, solving a stabbing in a
locked consulting room. No idea whether it's "one
of those amazing coincidences"
or whether there's a story behind, but I would like to see them back
in print. Even more so, if they turn out to be completely different,
unconnected detective stories. James Street's Carbon
Monoxide
(1937) caught my attention and breath, because I thought I had found
an unknown, completely overlooked John
Rhode
novel hiding in plain sight. The impossible situation (carbon
monoxide poisoning in a locked garage) struck me as Rhodean, but
James Street turned out to be the pseudonym of Michael
Majolier
who also wrote Death
in an Armchair
(1937). Charles
Ashton
is listed with three novels, Death
Greets a Guest
(1936), Here's
Murder Done
(1943) and Dance
for a Dead Uncle
(1948), which all sound great and are criminally out-of-print! Same
goes for Hugh Austin's quartet of Peter Quint novels, It
Couldn't Be Murder
(1935), Murder
in Triplicate
(1935), Murder
of a Matriarch
(1936) and The
Upside Down Murders
(1937). Nigel Burnaby's The
Clue of the Green-Eyed Girl
(1935) presents another tantalizing impossible crime, murder in a
beach hut surrounded by unmarked sand, but this one, too, is
shamefully out-of-print. Same goes for Wallace Jackson's The
Zadda Street Affair
(1934). I could go on, and on, but let's move on to Skupin's Locked
Room Murders: Supplement.
Right
off the bat, Skupin's introduction throws a mouthwatering,
out-of-print locked room mystery at the reader, Terror
at Compass Lake
(1935) by Tech Davis. A mystery of a dead "that
was neither murder, suicide nor natural death"
and offers "a
new twist on the locked room mystery."
Eugene V. Brewster's Surprise
Party Murder
(1936) reportedly has a "sophisticated
solution"
to a reversal on the traditional locked room situation: a man denies
entering the study of his uncle "despite
the accounts of multiple witnesses."
William F. Temple's The
Dangerous Edge
(1951) briefly appeared in print during the early 2000s, but has
since gone back to obscurity and it has to be reprinted as its packed
with impossible disappearances and miraculous thefts committed by “a
master thief who announces his thefts in advance.”
Also "worthy
of note,"
Maisie Birmingham's extremely rare The
Mountain by Night
(1997). Birmingham wrote three novels in the 1970s and self-published
her last novel in '90s, which at the time probably meant that copies
were circulated privately. So copies are not easy to find, but that
was once the case with Derek Smith's Come
to Paddington Fair
(1997). So, hopefully, John Pugmire can track down a copy and have it
properly published.There
are some interesting titles listed in Skupin that might warrant
reprinting. Esther Fonseca's The
Thirteenth Bed in the Ballroom
(1937) concerns "death
by carbon monoxide poisoning of one girl in a dormitory when all
other girls were unaffected,"
but available copies can be described as nonexistent. Very little can
be found about it online. Sinclair Gluck's Sea
Shroud
(1934) has a locked room situation that invites further
investigation, "stabbing
in a room locked and bolted on the inside"
and "a
hole from a rifle shot"
in the barred window, but apparently copies are ultra rare. Stephen
Gould's Murder
of the Admiral
(1936) is the first of only two novel-length cases about a striking
pulp hero, Sheridan
Doome,
who has to figure out how someone could have been shot in a ship's
cabin under observation. The book was also published under the name
Steve Fisher. I've no special reason to list Charles Reed Jones' The
Van Norton Murders
(1931), except that it could very well be one of the earliest parody
or pastiche of S.S. van Dine and Philo Vance on record. Herman
Landon's Death
on the Air (1929)
has three people die "apparently
by the playing of a song,"
which is one of a handful of intriguing locked room mysteries he
wrote. Such as Mystery
Mansion
(1928) and Murder
Mansion
(1928), published respectively UK and US, which are nearly identical
except that "the
solutions are quite different."
Three
Brass Elephants
(1930) concerns the disappearance of an entirely room. This author
appeared on my radar after reading The
Back-Seat Murder
(1931) in 2019. Jason Manor's Too
Dead to Run
(1953) has one of those magic bullet puzzles that rarely fail to
fascinate me. Ning Xu's Murder
at the Drum Tower
(1994) was translated and published in English, but, today, copies
are nowhere to be found.
Just
to rattle off some random titles that caught my eye: Anthony
Gilbert's The
Tragedy at Freyne
(1927), E.C.R. Lorac's Murder
in St. John's Wood
(1934), George Bagby's Ring
Around a Murder
(1936), John Bentley's The
Dead Do Talk
(1944), B.C. Black's The
Draughtsman's Pen
(c. 1948), Theodore Brace's Death
Goes in a Trailer
(1950) and Nigel Brent's The
Leopard Died Too
(1957). And more Anthony
Wynne
reprints like The
Case of the Gold Coins
(1933) and Emergency
Exit
(1941).
So
here you have a very tiny, minuscule selection from the near Earth
planetoid, known as my personal wishlist, which for one reason or
another captured my imagination, but annoyingly remain out of reach.
And would welcome reprints with open arms. But then again, that was
said about a lot detective novels writers and novels since discussed
on this blog. Let's press on with the Renaissance!