I
perhaps should have waited with compiling and writing this brief
history of the locked room mystery in 21st century, probably until
2025, but recent publications made me reflect on the state of the
locked room subgenre in 2000 and how radically the landscape has
altered in two short decades – a transitional period, of sorts,
that ended in 2020. Fittingly, the world went into lockdown at the
same time the locked room mystery started on, what appears to be, a
new phase in its long and storied history stretching all the way back
to Edgar Allan Poe's "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" (1841). But
first, we have to go back in time a little further than the year
2000.
The
locked room mystery, in all its guises, has always been somewhat of a
large, specialized niche that attracted its own devoted admirers and
practitioners, but the immediate post-war period came with a sharp
decline in locked room novels. John
Dickson Carr and John
Russell Fearn were the only writers who stubbornly persisted
alongside some occasionally flareups over the decades. Some valiant,
frustratingly short-lived attempts were made in the sixties like Paul
Gallico's Too
Many Ghosts (1961), Kip Chase's Murder
Most Ingenious (1962), Charles Forsyte's Diving
Death (1962) and John Vance's The
Fox Valley Murders (1966). None of those writers or series
got pass two or three novels. John Sladek left an indelible mark on
the genre a decade later with Black
Aura (1974) and Invisible
Green (1977). The 1980s represent a small revival as Bill
Pronzini introduced his nameless detective to a series of impossible
crimes in Hoodwink
(1981), Scattershot
(1982) and Bones
(1985). Herbert Resnicow added a new dimension to the impossible
crime with his large-scale locked room puzzles as exemplified by The
Gold Deadline (1984) and The
Dead Room (1987), which I consider to be the best of the lot.
The next ten years were a lull as Peter Lovesey's Bloodhounds
(1996) is the only well-known locked room mystery from the '90s, but
Mary Monica Pulver's Original
Sin (1991), Roger Ormerod's A
Shot at Nothing (1993) and Paul Doherty's A
Murder in Thebes (1998) should not be overlooked.While
the locked room and impossible crime novel experienced a decline in
the second-half of the previous century, it positively thrived in
short story form as various publications continued to publish them –
most notably Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, Ellery
Queen's Mystery Magazine and Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine.
These magazines produced three legitimate claimants to Carr's mantle,
Edward
D. Hoch, Joseph
Commings and Arthur
Porges, who wrote over 200 short impossible crime stories between
them. More than half of the stories came from Hoch ("...among
the most gifted contemporary creators of impossible crime stories").
So
the locked room mystery novel took a backseat to the short story as
publications like EQMM produced "a host of excellent
authors, many of whom have contributed generously to the impossible
crime saga." Occasionally, the locked room puzzle would turn in
a novel and sometimes in the oddest of places. Like Nicholas Wilde's
juvenile mystery Death
Knell (1990) or Michael Slade's gory thriller Ripper
(1994). That's more or less where things stood in 2000 and remained
that way until roughly 2006. But those first years were not bereft of
some excellent miracle crimes.
The
first notable publication of the new century is undoubtedly Mike
Ashley's 500-pager The Mammoth Book of Locked Room Mysteries and
Impossible Crimes (2000), which is a diverse collection of older,
rarely stories material and newly commissioned material original to
the anthology. So the anthology added some new, good and interesting
stories to the genre right off the bat. Kate Ellis' "The Odour of
Sanctity" concerns a murdered man who's thrown from an open window
of a locked tower room. Lois H. Gresh and Robert Weinberg's "Death
Rides the Elevator" deals with the decapitation of the sole
occupant of a sealed and moving elevator solved by a modern-day Nero
Wolfe and Archie Goodwin. H.R.F. Keating's "The Legs That Walked"
has a pair of freshly severed legs disappear from a guarded tent, but
honesty compels me to point out Keating likely swiped the solution
from Edmund
Crispin, but Keating used it so much better than Crispin. Susanna
Gregory's "Ice Elation" is not, strictly speaking, an impossible
crime story and perhaps should not have been part of the anthology,
but really liked the setting and premise of scientists disappearing
from an Antarctic research station. It really should have been a
novel-length mystery-thriller.Edward
D. Hoch continued to write short stories until his death in 2008 and
two stories from this late period standout. "The
Problem of the Potting Shed" (2000) offers an ingenious and
original solution to the problem of how someone could be shot in a
locked shed with a small window too small to have been used as an
exit. "Circus
in the Sky" (2000) answers a twenty year old challenge from Jon
L. Breen's parody "The
Problem of the Vanishing Town" (1979) to find a rational
explanation how someone could be shredded to death on the top floor
of a high-rise building as if a lion had appeared from nowhere and
then vanished. Hoch represented the old guard during this period, but
new writers appeared on the scene.
J.A.
Konrath's debuted in the mid-2000s with Whiskey Sour (2004)
that introduced his series-detective, Lt. Jacqueline "Jack"
Daniels, who has starred as of this writing in 17 novels and numerous
short stories – two of which are locked room stories. "On
the Rocks" (2004) is a conventional of the two as Lt. Daniel is
confronted with a dodgy suicide in a locked and barricaded apartment. "With
a Twist" (2005) is a minor classic by turning the
suicide-disguised-as-murder on its head. A terminally-ill puzzle
fiend commits suicide under circumstances defying reality and planted
clues all over the locked suicide room. Arguably, the first real gem
the decade produced and pairs beautifully with "On the Rocks." If
only Konrath had written some more!
The
five-year period from 2000 to 2005 saw few noteworthy impossible
crime novels with exception of Lee Sheldon's self-published
Impossible
Bliss (2001). Sheldon is a game designer and former
scriptwriter who penned episodes for Blacke's
Magic, Clue
Club, Father Murphy, The Edge of Night and The
Eddie Capra Mysteries. Many of which feature locked room murders
and impossible disappearances. Impossible Bliss introduces his
capricious painter and detective, Herman Bliss, who's confronted with
the perplexing disappearance of a golfer right after making a nigh
miraculous shot. Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of Impossible
Bliss is that Sheldon was a good twenty years ahead of the curb.
When self-published novels, regardless of merit, had the stench of
the vanity press around them. So the second, still unpublished Herman
Bliss novel, The Beast of Big Sur, never materialized. A
peripheral author, of sorts, who deserves a mention is the late
Christopher
Fowler as he created the first Great Detectives of the new
century, Arthur Bryant and John May of the Peculiar Crimes Unit,
which began with Full Dark House (2004) and The Water Room
(2004) – trumpeted at the time as modern-day locked room mysteries.
However, the series only began to venture into the impossible crime
territory with (IIRC) Ten Second Staircase (2006), White
Corridor (2007) and The Victoria Vanishes (2008). I lost
track of the series after The Memory of Blood (2011) and need
to return to it one of these days.
Halfway
through the first decade, subtle changes began to happen that would
set the tone for the 2010s and completely alter the landscape of the
locked room mystery in the West. There were three publications that
can now be identified as bellwethers of those coming changes.Firstly,
Wildside Press published John Pugmire's eagerly anticipated
translation of Paul
Halter's short story collection La
nuit du loup (The Night of the Wolf, 2000) in 2006.
There are some excellent stories to be found in this collection. "La
hache" ("The Cleaver," 2000) is simply one of Halter's best
short stories and the best take on that rarity of the impossible
crime story, the predictive dream, while "La marchande de fleurs"
("The Flower Girl," 2000) is an imaginative tangle of Christmas
miracles concerning the possible existence of Santa Claus. More
importantly, the lack of further interest from publishers drove
Pugmire to create Locked Room
International and changed the whole game. More on that in minute.
Secondly, Hal White's collection of longish short stories, The
Mysteries of Reverend Dean (2008), came like a bolt out of
the blue as White had not enjoyed the same, decades-long myth
building as Halter and a collection of exclusive, brand new
impossible crime stories were not all that common at the time –
especially from a single writer. So coming out guns blazing in your
alliance to the impossible crime story left an impression in 2008,
but not a lasting one as the collection seems to be largely forgotten
today. You can likely blame that on White never returning to Reverend
Dean and the fluctuating quality of the plots, but I personally liked "Murder at an Island Mansion" and "Murder on a Caribbean
Cruise." The former presents Reverend Dean with three impossible
crimes of the no-footprints variety and the latter is a pleasantly
conventional shipboard mystery with a murder behind the tightly
locked door of a cabin. But other readers praised "Murder in a
Sealed Loft" as the collection's standout story. I should also note
here The Mysteries of Reverend Dean received a Japanese
translation. Foreshadowing!
The
third publication is not a collection of short stories or even a
novel, but an old school webpage, "A
Locked Room Library," added to the MysteryFile
in 2007. The page brings together the 1981 top 14 locked room novels
voted on by a panel headed by Edward D. Hoch and the then brand new
ranking conducted by the celebrated anthologist, Roland Lacourbe, who
wanted to create "a list of novels which should be included in
any respectable French locked room lovers collection." Lacourbe
gathered the results under the title "99 Novels for a Locked Room
Library" and appended the list with 14 additional novels that due
to a lack availability in French failed to garner enough votes. I
think the 1981 and 2007 ranking proved to be a window into both the
past and the future. The 1981 ranking looks now more than ever as
very basic and standard list with most of the usual, well-known
suspects represented. Ellery
Queen somehow got two novels listed purely on name recognition
and not because The Chinese Orange Mystery (1934) or The
King is Dead (1952) are classics of the impossible crime story,
but a perfect illustration of the rut in which the English-language
locked room novel found itself in during the second-half of the 20th
century. Lacourbe's ranking is loaded with obscure, long out-of-print
rarities, untranslated titles and generally some surprising picks.
Lacourbe's "99 Novels for a Locked Room Library" appeared like a
hazy mirage of a desert oasis as unreachable as an affordable copy of
A. & P. Shaffer's Withered Murder (1955). You only have to
take a glance at "The
Updated Mammoth List of My Favorite Tales of Locked Room Murders &
Impossible Crimes" and JJ's "A
Locked Room Library – One Hundred Recommended Books" to get
an idea how much that situation has changed since 2007.
While
the genre awaited the coming translation wave, the second-half of the
2000s saw several old names return to the locked room mystery. Bill
Pronzini confronted his nameless detective with a double
impossibility in Schemers
(2009) when a collector of mystery novels asks him to investigate the
mysterious disappearance of half a dozen collectibles from his
private library, but then that same private library becomes the scene
of a seemingly impossible murder. The theft of the books has an
excellent explanation and the murder has "a sick new way of
killing somebody" behind a locked door. In 2005, Pronzini
resurrected his two historical gumshoes, John
Quincannon and Sabina Carpenter, in a new series of short stories
that appeared in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. Years later,
Pronzini began to rework the short stories, new and old, into a
series novel-length mysteries which he co-wrote with his wife, Marcia
Muller. The series began with The
Bughouse Affair (2013) and each novel has one or more
impossibility to dispel with The
Stolen Gold Affair (2020) having a particular neat one staged
in an underground, dead-end crosscut of a gold mine. This series
would make for a great TV-series, but its biggest contribution is
that it gave the locked room mystery attention outside of our niche
at a time when it needed the most.A
strange, unlikely return was that of the sadistic thriller novelist,
Michael Slade, who tried to merge a story of cruel, tortuous serial
killings with several locked room puzzles in Ripper
(1994), which received praise at the time for being Grand Guignol
fair play mystery – not everyone agreed. Stylistically, anyway.
Slade tried his hands at it again with Crucified
(2008) and Red
Snow (2010). Crucified proved to be surprisingly good,
original even, as the skeleton discovered inside an excavated
WWII-era bomber turns the wreck into an archaeological "locked
room." Arguably an even stranger, more unlikely return was that of
a long-dead pulp writer. John
Russell Fearn died in 1960 and would have been forgotten even
today had it not been for Philip Harbottle. Not only ensuring
practically all of Fearn's work returned to print and remained in
print, but expanded his body of work with several previously
unpublished novels. The
Man Who Was Not (2005) is a pulp-style mystery-thriller in
which a seemingly omniscient killer terrorizes a family with
terrifyingly accurate predictions of their death and the death become
progressively more impossible as they try to take precautions.
Pattern
of Murder (2006) is Fearn's masterpiece and a highlight of
the decade. A brilliantly presented and executed inverted mystery
that takes place among the employees of a cinema, which was familiar
territory for Fearn and makes the story standout. The murder method
is inspired and something of an impossible crime from the perspective
of the police.
I
would be amiss not to mention the dark historian, Paul
Doherty, who has been a lone, often overlooked, but
prolific, champion of the locked room mystery ever since debuting in
the 1980s. Doherty probably gets overlooked on account of exclusively
writing historical mysteries making his impossible crime fiction feel
disconnected from the rest of the genre. Like they existed in a
separate pocket universe. Doherty produced two noteworthy locked room
novels during the late 2000s. The
Spies of Sobeck (2008) is the seventh and regrettably last
novel to feature an Egyptian judge from antiquity, Amerotke, which
has the impudent cheek to exploit its historical setting to explain
how man could have been strangled inside a fortified retreat. The
Mysterium (2010) is not the most ingenious impossible crime
novel penned during this period, but Doherty clad the story in a
thick, dark and brooding atmosphere somewhat reminiscent of Theodore
Roscoe. The two impossibilities are merely an extra on top of
Doherty's most engrossing Hugh Corbett chronicle to date.So
the genre entered the second decade of the 21st century, the 2010s,
which would change everything and began with the founding of
Pugmire's Locked Room International. A game changer, if there ever
was one!
Locked
Room International dedicated itself at first to publishing
translations of Paul Halter that included a lot of his novels from
the 1980s and '90s, but, over time, more of his novels from the past
twenty years were translated – some of which can be counted among
Halter's best. La
toile de Pénélope (Penelope's Web, 2001) deserves a
mention as it found a unique way to seal the scene of the crime by
covering the open window with an intricately-woven, thick and
undamaged spiderweb. La
ruelle fantôme (The Phantom Passage, 2005) is a minor
tour-de-force as Halter outdid himself with a stunningly brilliant
answer to the problem of a dark, obscure passageway that keeps
appearing and disappearing like a ghost. La
masque du vampire (The Mask of the Vampire, 2014) is a
dark flight of fancy and one of Halter's most successful attempt to
intertwine multiple impossibilities like a murderer who's seen
disappearing up a chimney as a wisp of smoke. Halter closed out the
decade with an international exclusive. La
montre en or (The Gold Watch, 2019) appeared in
English, Chinese and Japanese ahead of the French publication and
this time-shattering detective tale proved to be a highlight of the
2010s and rightfully praised for its take on the no-footprints
scenario.
During
the first five years, LRI mostly published Paul Halter with some odds
and ends like Jean-Paul Török's tribute to John Dickson Carr,
L'enigme
du Monte Verita (The Riddle of Monte Verita, 2007),
that can be read as a flattering fan letter to the master. The
Derek Smith Omnibus (2014) finally gave Come
to Paddington Fair (1997) a proper print-run as it had
previously appeared in a limited run of less than 100 copies and fans
have disagreed ever since whether or not it's actually better than
Whistle
Up the Devil (1954). Around 2014, LRI began to expand their
catalog with translations of Noël
Vindry, Ulf
Durling and Yukito
Ayatsuji. That last name appears to have opened to the floodgates
to a translation wave.
In
2015, LRI published the first English edition of Ayatsuji's landmark
novel, Jakkakukan
no satsujin (The
Decagon House Murders,
1987), which was received in Japan "as
en epoch-making event"
forever changing "the
world of Japanese mystery fiction with revolutionary new ideas"
– kick starting the shin
honkaku movement. While
it was The Decagon House
Murders that got it
moving, it was Soji
Shimada who designed the shin
honkaku blueprint
earlier in the decade with novels like Senseijutsu
satsujinjiken (The
Tokyo Zodiac Murders,
1981) and Naname
yashiki no hanzai
(Murder in the Crooked
House, 1982). This
movement rejuvenated the Golden Age-style detective story and proved
you can teach an old dog new tricks. Shimada wrote in his
introduction to the English translation, "it
is my belief that if we can introduce this concept to the field of
American and British detective fiction, the Golden Age pendulum will
swing back, just as The
Tokyo Zodiac Murders and
The Decagon House Murders managed
to accomplish in Japan."
The current developments in the Western detective story appear to be
proving him correct, but more on that in a moment.Just
like Shimada's The Tokyo
Zodiac Murders paved the
way for Ayatsuji's The
Decagon
House Murders,
Keigo
Higashino's 2011 translation of Yogisha
X no kenshin (The
Devotion of Suspect X,
2005) turning into an international hit can be credited with opening
the door for publishers to take a chance on Japanese crime fiction.
Ironically enough, neither The
Decagon House Murders or
The Devotion of Suspect X
contain a locked room murder or impossible crime of any kind, but the
so-called translation wave that followed were overwhelmingly locked
room mysteries. And overwhelmingly older writers from the original
classic period or from the 1980s. These names range from Akimitsu
Takagi, Keikichi
Osaka and Seishi
Yokomizo to the new generation of Alice
Arisugawa, Takemaru
Abiko and Yamaguchi
Masaya, but practically nothing from the '90s and only a handful
of gems from the past two decades.Zaregoto
series: kubikiri saikuru
(Zaregoto: The Kubikiri
Cycle, 2002) by "NisiOisiN" is the least-known, unfairly overlooked of these
translated gems as the series is perhaps too close to the fringes for
your average western mystery reader. The series blends the
storytelling and plotting of the traditional detective story with
manga
aesthetics and characters, but The
Kubikiri Cycle has
multiple impossible murders taking place among a group of geniuses
who gathered at a place called Wet Crow's Feather Island.
Unsurprisingly, the trick employed to present the detective and
reader with a headless body in a locked room is quite ingenious and
inspired. Misshitsu
no kagi kashimasu
(Lending a Key to the
Locked Room, 2002)
introduces Tokuya Higashigawa's "series-character," Ikagawa
City, acting as an assemble cast and concerns the problem of a
film student waking up in a locked apartment with a dead body in the
bathroom. Another very well constructed locked room novel and an even
better example of the high quality of debut novels of Japanese
authors. I sincerely hope this is not the last western readers have
seen of the port city and its citizens. Higashino second novel to be
translated, Seijo
no Kyusai (Salvation
of a Saint, 2008), is an
inverted mystery which tells the reader who poisoned the victim, but
now how as it appeared to have been impossible for this person to
have administrated the poison. A necessarily character-driven mystery
with a very original solution to the problem that you can only
swallow due to the character building. The best was yet to come!
Since
the 1980s, the Japanese detective story has been enjoying its Second
Golden Age, but, after three decades of dominance, readers yearned
for the kind of impetus that Ayatsuji's The
Decagon House Murders
had created – a challenge that did not go unanswered. Masahiro
Imamura's Shijinso
no satsujin (Death
Among the Undead, 2017)
is a landmark mystery novel that, on its surface, begins like your
regular shin honkaku
mystery novel with an isolated setting, impossible crimes aplenty and
university students who plays detective, but Imamura turned to
concept on its head by situating the story right in the middle of a
small, localized zombie apocalypse. The introduction of fantastic
elements, like zombies, in a strictly fairplay detective story works
better than you might assume, because readers are exactly told what
the zombies can and cannot do. So the internal logic, while weird,
remains sound and opened (not closed) new doors to tell and plot a
detective story. Death
Among the Undead was
received in Japan as a potential sign a revolutionary change and
possible Third Golden Age is on the horizon. I agree.LRI
also recently published the sequel, Magan
no hako no satsujin
(Death Within the Evil
Eye, 2019), which
combines a traditional murder mystery with inescapable visions of the
future. Death Among the
Undead and Death
Within the Evil Eye are
both modern-day classics and perhaps even signs of a coming age in
which the hybrid
mystery rises to dominance. John Pugmire confirmed that a
translation of the third title, Kyoujinteo
no satsujin (The
Murder in the House of Maleficence,
2021), is forthcoming.
I
need to pause here to emphasize how important these developments have
been up to this point and the locked room resurgence coinciding with
the current reprint renaissance and translation wave. Never before
had detective fans, like us, access to such a wide and varied
selection of detective-and crime fiction as today. Whether reprints,
translations, public domain work or newly published, the past twenty
years has left us spoiled for choice. The effects have already become
slowly visible over the past three years, or so, but more on that in
a moment.
The
locked room genre unexpectedly stirred back to life in my country,
the Netherlands, which can be harsh, unforgiving place for detective
fiction with a traditional bend, but that has changed a bit with
M.P.O.
Books – who reintroduced the concept in De blikvanger
(The Eye-Catcher, 2010). Although this initial attempt
provided a fairly minor and modest locked room-puzzle, a poisoning
behind several locked doors, it lighted the way for a second, much
more ambitious stab at the impossible crime story. En hoe! Een
afgesloten huis (A Sealed House, 2013) is the first
Dutch-language locked room mystery of note to be published since Cor
Docter's Koude
vrouw in Kralingen (Cold Woman in Kralingen, 1970) in
which a notorious criminal is gutted inside his fortress-like home. A
completely sealed fortress secured with steel shutters, burglar
alarms and motion sensors that trigger security cameras and overhead
lights. Books has since added many more novels and short stories
under a now open penname, "Anne
van Doorn," beginning with "De
dichter die zichzelf opsloot" ("The Poet Who Locked Himself
In," 2017). A short story that was translated and published in the
September/October, 2019, issue of Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine.
The best of the short stories is perhaps "Het
huis dat ongeluk bracht" ("The House That Brought Bad Luck,"
2018) using the haunted house setting to stage a series of ghostly
visitations, but the standout of the series is undoubtedly De
man die zijn geweten ontlastte (The Man Who Relieved His
Conscience, 2019) with two impossible murders, a dying message,
false-solutions and a revelation about the main character that caught
me off guard. Books is not the only Dutch author who tried his hands
at everyone favorite trope.
P.
Dieudonné's third politieroman (police novel),
Rechercheur
De Klerck en de ongrijpbare dood (Inspector De Klerck and
the Elusive Death, 2020), strings together three impossible
disappearances. Firstly, there's the disappearance of a body
alongside with the murderer from a burning building with all exits
either locked or under observation. Secondly, the police has to
contend with a motor rider who tears up the city with dangerous
stunts and has to peculiar ability to miraculous disappear or
reappear. This breaks with traditions of the old-school Dutch
politieroman as they tend to be more about the journey than
the destination and rarely feature unbreakable alibis, dying messages
or impossible crimes, but Dieudonné does not shy away from any of
them – integrated them seamlessly into the style of the
politieroman. The solution to the double vanishing from the
burning building stands out as a huge improvement on an old idea that
always felt a little contrived. Rechercheur
De Klerck en een dodelijk pact (Inspector De Klerck and a
Deadly Pact, 2022) returned to the impossible disappearance with
a sub-plot involving a Swiss-style chalet that somehow got lost.So
while the 2010s were slowly drawing to a close, two self-published
authors deserve singling out for their contributions before moving on
to the first-half of the 2020s. Matt
Ingwalson published three novellas, "The Single Staircase" (2012), "WDYG" (2013) and "Not With a Bang" (2016), which
explored the reasons for creating a locked room scenario and the
stories take a minimalist approach – chapter lengths run anywhere
from a few lines to a couple of pages. Ingwalson cut everything out
except the essentials and therefore one of those rare occurrences of
deconstructionism creating something instead of tearing it down. You
can say these three novellas take a pair of hedge clippers rather
than a sledgehammer to the locked room mystery. Robert
Innes has set himself the enviable task of trying to please two
entirely different and demanding audiences by juggling two entirely
different genres, locked room mysteries and romance, within the same
series. I've only read two of the currently eleven novellas, but the
presentation and resolution to the impossibilities showed the genre
still has large, untapped reservoirs of creative juices. Ripples
(2017) has a murderer fleeing the scene of the crime by sprinting
across the surface of a lake and Flatline
(2018) concerns a drowning inside a sealed, dry-as-dust, hospital
elevator. The future of the genre as a whole was looking bright as
the next decade loomed on the horizon.
I
alluded to the visible effects of the reprint renaissance and
translation wave that has slowly been taking shape over the past
three, four years beginning with the arrival of James Scott Byrnside.
Byrnside
is the child of the renaissance who did not began to read Golden Age
detective fiction until 2017 and immediately penned two novel-length
fan letters to Christianna
Brand, Goodnight
Irene (2018) and The
Opening Night Murders (2019), but began to find his own voice
with The
Strange Case of the Barrington Hills Vampires (2020) and The
5 False Suicides (2021) – all of them containing one or
more well-crafted locked room mysteries ("I
wouldn't be interested in writing anything except impossible crime").
These four prodigious detective novels have raised the bar for
self-published mysteries. Byrnside is not the only self-published
author to demonstrate a firm grasp and keen-eyed understanding of
what makes a good detective story tick. A. Carver's The
Author is Dead (2022) and Jim Noy's The
Red Death Murders (2022) impressively strung together
multiple impossibilities, dazzling the reader with multiple false and
original solutions, which have a distinctly Japanese flavoring to
their storytelling, plots or characters. Carver wrote The Author
is Dead specifically as a Western-style take on shin honkaku
mysteries like The Decagon House Murders and The
Kindaichi Case Files. So the translation wave is already
leaving its traces on the genre's landscape. Robert Trainor's The
Murder of Nora Winters (2016) warrants a mention as the story
suggests Trainor is not a devout reader of impossible crime fiction,
but, for an outsider, he produced a clever and spirited piece of
amateur detective fiction.I
should note here that the uptick in self-published locked room
mysteries have gone up considerably in recent years and the quality
is rising along with it, but the lack of entry barriers means there's
still a lot of tribe to wade through. So there's still a galaxy-wide
gap between a Byrnside or Carver and a Steve
Levi or Raymond
Knight Read. Jim Noy, of The Invisible Event, has more closely
examined this corner of the genre, "Adventures
in Self-Publishing," but if you really want to know what's
underneath the bottom of the barrel, you need to read David Marsh's
Dead Box (2004). Only self-published novel Jim is too cowardly
to review. I dare you, Jim! It's still print.
Away
from the world of self-published mysteries and closer to the
mainstream, Tom Mead, "a
student of the locked room," debuted with the
ambitiously-plotted Death
and the Conjuror (2022) challenging his series-detective,
Joseph Spector, to disentangle no less than three impossible crimes.
The second entry in this locked room series, The Murder Wheel
(2023), is expected to be released later this year. Gigi Pandian is
another modern-day champion of the locked room genre, but, to date,
have only read her short story collection The
Cambodian Curse (2018) with "The Haunted Room" (2014)
being the standout story. A tale of haunted room, suffering from
kleptomania, where all kind of items have inexplicably vanished over
the decades (it really should have been called "The Magpie's
Nest"). Another notable and personal favorite among these moderns
is D.L. Marshall's John Tyler series that merges the action-and spy
thriller with the traditional detective story and locked room
mystery. The first novel in the series, Anthrax
Island (2021), is simply fantastic with its post-apocalyptic
aesthetics on a contaminated island where someone receives a 7.65mm
lobotomy inside a locked and watched room. Unfortunately, the
impossible crime took a backseat in the second novel, Black
Run (2021), but seems to be front and center in the third
book. 77 North (2023) brings John Tyler to "an old
Soviet-era hotel on an ice-locked island in the frozen wastes of
Siberia," where the KGB experimented with psychic phenomena,
but "a killer stalks the hotel's dilapidated corridors, able,
apparently, to kill through concrete walls and sealed doors."
That one will be published next month.So
this brief historic overview of the locked room mystery in the 21th
century has gone on longer than originally intended, but still have
glossed over a ton of stuff that brought us to this point. Such as
the addition of several hefty anthologies with rarely reprinted and
new material, an increased presence in TV-series (e.g. Monk
and Death in Paradise) and the slightly more easier access to
anime-and manga detectives with the Detective Conan one-hour
TV-special The
Cursed Mask Laughs Coldly (2000) being the first great locked
room mystery of the century. So while brushing pass some of the finer
details, I think my rambling served its purpose in showing where the
genre was in 2000 and what happened between then and now. But where
does it all go from here?
For
the foreseeable future, say from now until 2028-29, I can see the
trend from the past few years steadily continue as nearly every
recent writer and publisher mentioned have new books or translations
forthcoming to keep the fire kindled. The locked room story always
had its own dedicated cult of followers, loyal as dogs and as
dogmatic as an inquisitor, which grew as a niche due to the reprints
and translations – which made it easier than ever before to indulge
in impossible crime fiction. I'll refer you to the previously
discussed best-of lists from past and present to get an idea how easy
it has become. When the locked room mystery has you hooked, you can
never pry yourself free from it.
Where
the self-publishing side is concerned, I can see the online hub
taking the place of the Japanese university club rooms in the West. A
place where aspiring mystery writers and simply fans can test their
ideas, hone their writing skills and freely experiment. Some of the
best locked room mysteries from the past ten years either came from
smaller publishers or were self-published. Depending how things turn
out, the cream of the crop might get picked up by publishers who want
a piece of the retro-GAD pie. After all, the locked room mystery is
somewhat of specialist's game. My only reservation is that the fandom
seems to be insulated today locked away in private groups and
servers. These vintage mystery blogs began to appear during the 2010s
as a response to the mailing groups and message boards dying out when
an attempt was made to migrate to social media, which killed those
large, interactive archives of reviews and discussions. And
eventually were deleted. But they were open to everyone to browse,
read or lurk before deciding whether or not to create an account to
participate in the discussions. Those lists and boards did their part
in changing the landscape as open information sources and gathering
places. Something these cluster of blogs never managed to fully
replicate, but let's not end this rambling on a sour note.
Wherever
the locked room genre will find itself twenty years from now, the
immediate future is looking bright and for now there's a lot to look
forward to. So thank you all for coming to my TED talk and onward to
the locked room's 200th birthday in 2041!