Since
2020, these years roundups acquired a depressing undertone and I'm
afraid this year is no exception as Rupert Heath, of Dean
Street Press, died on March 6 of heart failure – aged only 54.
Curt Evans announced the news on his blog, "Death
of a Publisher," before an official email confirmed DSP was
getting shut down. Only the last five scheduled Moray
Dalton reprints were published in April, but Heath and DSP left
behind an indelible mark on the genre and gave the reprint
renaissance the momentum it needed back in 2015.
John
Pugmire, of Locked Room
International, had to dial it back his publications due to health
issues and Black Heath stopped altogether in February. Black Heath
was not exactly a quality publisher, but sometimes reissued some
interesting novels and authors like Harriette
Ashbrook, Nicholas
Brady and James
Quince. On the upside, Moonstone
Press is planning to reprint James
Ronald and Pushkin Vertigo
is going to add a lot more Japanese titles to their catalog in 2024.
Starting with Akimitsu Takagi's Noumen satsujin jiken (The
Noh Mask Murder, 1949) and Seishi Yokomizo's Akuma no temari
uta (The Little Sparrow Murders, 1957/59) coming in the
first-half of next year Tetsuya Ayukawa's Kuroi hakuchou (The
Black Swan Mystery, 1960) and Yukito Ayatsuji's Meirokan no
satsujin (The Labyrinth House Murders, 1988) coming
towards the end of the year. The BBB
is currently serializing MORI Hiroshi's Tsumetai misshitsu to
hakase tachi (Doctors in the Isolated Room, 1996), which
should be available as a complete ebook sometime early next year.
This comes in addition to more vintage reprints and anthologies from
the British
Library and American
Mystery Classics on top of brand new novels from Anne
van Doorn, P.
Dieudonné, Tom
Mead and, hopefully, James
Scott Byrnside and A.
Carver. So not too bad, if you share my taste in detective
fictions.
This
year, I played genre historian and put together "The
Locked Room Mystery & Impossible Crime Story in the 21st Century:
A Brief Historic Overview of the First Twenty (Some) Years." I
also tried my hands several top 10 lists, but always try to go for an
unusual theme and unexpected picks. Such as a "Top
10 Fascinating World War II Detective Novels," "Top
10 Favorite Cases from Motohiro Katou's Q.E.D. vol. 1-25" and "Top
10 Non-English Detective Novels That Need to Be Translated."
Before
we hand over another year to the history books, it's time for the
yearly roundup of best, and worst, detective novels and short stories
encountered in 2023 and what a mess this list threatened to become –
coming close to scrapping it altogether. I finally managed to tidy
everything up, but had to whittle down the list considerably and
cutting the likes of Norman
Berrow and Philip
Kerr. However, I think the list is now presentable and a little
different from previous years. The locked room and impossible crime
story is, as to be expected, very well represented, but a surprising
amount of rereads made the list this year. No wonder I was struggling
to find titles for the worst-of section. I revisited a lot of old
favorites this year without really noticing. Another trend worth
pointing out is the growing number of detective novels, published in
the past five years, that make the cut. A second Golden Age really is
in the air!
So,
with all of that out of the way, I wish you all a Merry Christmas and
all the best for 2024. Now let's go down the list in chronological
order.
THE
BEST DETECTIVE NOVELS:
House
of Fear (1916) by Wadsworth Camp
A
surprisingly good, if somewhat dated, detective from the dawn of the
Golden Age and the grandfather of the ever popular theatrical
mystery novel. The setting is dark, decaying theater reputedly
haunted by the ghost of an actor who died on stage and his phantom
cat. First rate stuff for 1916!
The
Mysterious Affair at Styles (1916/20) by Agatha
Christie (a reread)
Christie's
debut is a diamond-in-the-rough, lacking only in subtlety and polish,
but bubbled with ideas and promise for the future. One of the better
debuts in the genre!
The
Wrong Letter (1926) by Walter S. Masterman
Another
surprisingly good debut and a better than average 1920s locked room
mystery with a solution that was somewhat innovative for the time.
There were a couple of other novel from the period playing with
similar ideas, which showed the genre was moving away from the
Doylean era.
Death
Walks in Eastrepps (1931) by Francis Beeding
A
vintage mystery-thriller that holds up today, even if the passage of
time dulled the twist at the end. In every other way, it's an
excellent, early serial killer novel showing the effects such an
individual can have on a small community.
La
nuit du 12 au 13 (The Night of the
12th-13th, 1931) by S.A. Steeman
Steeman
was a mystery novelist with a ton of original ideas that fueled the
French detective story during the 1930s. This is easily the best
Steeman novel I've read and another sign the detective story had
entered its Golden Age.
The
Hanging Captain (1932) by Henry Wade
Wade
is one of those once famous, but now underappreciated and often
overlooked Golden Age mystery writers, but he was a mystery novelist
of the first rank. The Hanging Captain has all his skill and talent
on display. More importantly, it earned extra points in my book for
indulging in the criminally underused trope of the rivaling
detectives.
Five
to Five (1934) by D. Erskine Muir
A
rock solid detective novel applying the skill of the mystery novelist
to a sordid, real-life crime and showing what could have happened if
a competent inspector had been in charge of the Oscar Slater Case.
Thou
Shell of Death (1936) by Nicholas Blake (a reread)
So
much better than I remembered and remembering bits and pieces of
solution, I could only sit back and admire how Blake rigged up a
grand deception. As good as the best from his better remembered
contemporaries.
Case
for Three Detectives (1936) by Leo Bruce (a
reread)
One
of my all-time favorite detective novels! Simultaneously being a
hilarious parody and perceptive pastiche of the genre crammed with
rivaling detectives, false-solutions and faked alibis. A gem from the
Golden Age!
The
Whistling Hangman (1937) by Baynard Kendrick (a
reread)
One
of my two favorite titles from this strange series standing on the
borderlands between comics, pulps and the traditional detective
story. In this novel, the blind Captain Duncan Maclain tackles two
impossible murders at a New York residential hotels. Deserves to be
reprinted!
Curtain
(c. 1940/75) by Agatha Christie (a reread)
The
last of the Hercule Poirot novels, written during the Second World
War in case the worst happened, but the book so much more than the
series nest egg. A serial killer story bringing a sickly,
wheelchair-bound Poirot back the scene of The Mysterious Affair at
Styles and pitted against subtle sadist who perfected the art of
murder. A grand farewell performance from the most celebrated mystery
writer and her famous creation!
You'll
Die Laughing (1945) by Bruce Elliott
A
short, fast-paced and imaginative pulp-style locked room minor and a
minor classic of the form, back in print since 2006, but continues to
fly under everyone's radar.
Subject—Murder
(1945) by Clifford Witting
A
classic of the British World War II mystery novel with a long
prelude, a comedy drama ending in tragedy, but when it happens, it
happens with the harsh, brutal justice of the Dark Ages and all the
ingenuity of the Golden Age.
Suddenly
at His Residence (1946) by Christianna Brand (a
reread)
This
is perhaps Brand's most conventional take on the detective story,
apparently ticking all the boxes, but underneath the clichés and
tropes is a first-rate mystery that can be tested against the best by
Carr and Christie. Amazingly, it's not even her second or third best
novel nor even the fourth or fifth! Brand simply was one of the best!
The
Girl with the Hole in Her Head (1949) by Hampton Stone
A
better than average second-stringer, or mid-tier, detective novel.
Solidly plotted with a good solution complimented and strengthened by
a motive arising from a very specific set of circumstances. Perhaps
not the best title on this list, but I enjoyed it.
Akuma
ga kitarite fue o fuku (The Devil's Flute
Murders, 1951/53) by Seishi Yokomizo
The
latest translation from Yokomizo's famous Kosuke Kindaichi series by
Pushkin Vertigo presenting a human tragedy as a detective story, a
locked room murder included, in which the truth comes at a hefty
prize. I eagerly look forward to the next translation coming next
year.
The
Caves of Steel (1953/54) by Isaac Asimov (a
reread)
A
masterpiece of the science-fiction and detective genres, but, purely
as a detective novel, I consider it to be one of the most important
detective novels from the second-half of the previous century. A
detective novel for the future demonstrating that even the presence
of highly advanced, futuristic is no excuse for a weak or
non-existent plotting.
The
Case of the Dead Man Gone (1961) by Christopher Bush
I
had to include a Christopher Bush title and while it has a smudge, or
two, it's still miles ahead of what was becoming fashionable at the
time. Bush tried and mostly succeeded in preserving the essential of
the classical detective story in his sleek, trimmed down 1960s
mysteries.
The
Killing of Katie Steelstock (1980) by Michael Gilbert
A
classically-styled, updated take on the quintessential British
village mystery in the deceiving guise of what appears to be a fairly
typical, 1980s police procedural.
Face
Value (1983) by Roger Ormerod
This
could, arguably, be the best traditionally-styled detective novel
produced in the West during the 1980s. A stunningly original and
daring mystery novel giving the reader a glimpse of what the Golden
Age detective novel could have evolved into had been allowed to
develop pass the 1950s.
Suishakan
no satsujin (The Mill House Murders,
1988) by Yukito Ayatsuji
The
eagerly anticipated sequel to Ayatsuji's epoch-making novel,
Jukkakukan
no satsujin (The Decagon House Murders, 1987), which
superbly weaves complex patterns out of sheer simplicity.
Fortunately, the publication of The Labyrinth House Murders is
only a few months away!
Subete
ga F ni naru (Everything Turns to F: The
Perfect Insider, 1996) by MORI Hiroshi
A
seminal novel for the second wave of shin honkaku couching the
neo-orthodox plots of the first wave in highly specialized
environments or subject matters. In this case, an isolated computer
research institute. Not the best detective novel Japan has produced
over the past forty years, but still very good and fascinating to
compare it to the works of "NisiOisiN"
and Motohiro
Katou.
Crucified
(2008) by Michael Slade
An
excellent, somewhat gory mystery-thriller in which the archaeological
discovery of a lost WWII-era Allied bomber leads to the discovery of
a long buried, seemingly impossible murder of the rear gunner. The
wreck of a sealed submarine offers a second historical locked room
mystery.
Gallows
Court (2018) by Martin Edwards
A
tremendously enjoyable, pulp-style thriller that introduces a
retro-Golden Age mystery series, starring Rachel Savernake, from the
Nestor of the Golden Age Renaissance, Martin Edwards. You can expect
reviews of Mortmain Hall (2020) and Blackstone Fell
(2022) next year.
Magan
no hako no satsujin (Death Within the Evil
Eye, 2019) by Masahiro Imamura
I
called the first novel in this series a shock to the system and this
second novel the calm after the story, but the problem of inescapable
prophesy of the future is nothing to sneeze at. Hopefully, we can
expect a translation of the third novel sometime next year. Fingers
crossed!
The
Paradise Affair (2021) by Bill Pronzini
Possibly,
the final title in the series in which John Quincannon and Sabina
Carpenter finally tied the marital knot, but work goes on and they
end up solving a locked room murder with a dying message in Honolulu,
Hawaii. If this is their last recorded case, Pronzini gave them a
happy sendoff that retrospectively brightened Beyond
the Grave (1986).
The
English Garden Mystery (2022) by Dan Andriacco
A
homage to the mystery writing cousins Frederic Dannay and Manfred B.
Lee, a.k.a. “Ellery Queen,” covering everything from a subtitle
(“A Problem in Deduction”) to the Queenian tropes of the dying
message, false-solutions, fallible detective and a challenge to the
reader. Andriacco apparently also penned a locked room mystery
(Holmes Sweet Holmes, 2012) that I'll get to next year.
Monkey
See, Monkey Murder (2023) by James Scott Byrnside
The
fourth novel in the Rowan Manory series and the first to probe the
hardboiled underbelly of a prohibition-era Chicago, but not without
throwing the 1920s gumshoe a locked room murder to chew on. What a
locked room murder! One of the more bizarre impossible crimes I've
come across in a while!
The
Christmas Miracle Crimes (2023) by A. Carver
Have
you ever noticed how many Christmas mysteries only feature Christmas
incidentally? Carver noticed and decided to write a genuine Christmas
mystery crammed like an overflowing sack of presents with seasonal
miracles and magic. I'm sure this one will go down in history as an
early highlight of the locked room and impossible crime revival.
Carver shows what can be done when building on your genre's rich,
stories history instead of dismissing it.
Rechercheur
De Klerck en de ongewenste dood (Inspector De Klerck
and the Unwanted Death, 2023) by P. Dieudonné
This
series has the deceiving, outward appearance of a Dutch politieroman,
which are hardly known for their plot complexity, but Dieudonné
fixed that problem. And the newest addition to the series
impressively tiptoes across an particularly slippery tightrope of a
plot without tripping.
Het
Delfts blauw mysterie (The Delft Blue
Mystery, 2023) by Anne van Doorn
The
first entry in the New York Cops series, written in Dutch, but an
English translation is in the works and hopefully it will be
published before too long, because the story is excellent. A cleverly
constructed locked room mystery set in a modern-day skyscraper and
snugly fits into the tradition of S.S.
van Dine, Anthony
Abbot, Herbert
Resnicow and Ed McBain's 87th Precinct series. Just penned by a
Dutchman!
The
Murder Wheel (2023) by Tom Mead
A
tremendous improvement over Death
and the Conjuror (2022) with the third impossibility, a body
materializing out of thin air, lives up to his growing reputation as
a modern-day champion of the locked room mystery. Although I think
Mead has so far shown a far more skilled hand when it comes to
crafting and dovetailing intricate, GAD-style whodunits than
Carr-like miracle problems. Nevertheless, I'm looking forward to see
what Mead is going to do with my hobby horse in Cabaret Carnival
(2024).
THE
BEST SHORT STORIES AND SHORT STORY COLLECTIONS:
Short
Story Collections:
The
Name is Malone (1958) by Craig Rice
London's
Glory (2015) by Christopher Fowler
The
Adventures of the Puzzle Club and Other Stories (2022) by
Ellery Queen and Josh Pachter
Short
Stories:
"Lars
Blom" ("Lars Blom and His Disappearing Gun," 1857/63) by
August Blanche
"Le
mystére de la chambre verte" ("The Mystery of the Green
Room," 1936) by Pierre Véry
"“Who
Killed Matthew Corbin?" (1939/40) by John Dickson Carr
"The
Name on the Window" (1951) by Edmund Crispin
"Tall
Story" (1954) by Margery Allingham
"The
Glass Room" (1957) by Morton Wolson (reviewed together with "Tall
Story")
"The
Locked Roomette" (1990) by William Bankier
"The
Burglar Who Dropped In On Elvis" (1990) by Lawrence Block
"The
King's Writ" (2017) by Paul Doherty
THE
WORST DETECTIVE NOVELS AND SHORT STORIES:
Novels:
The
Toledo Dagger (1927) by Robert Brennan
I'm
convinced Ronald Knox had a copy of The Toledo Dagger on his
desk when he compiled "The
Ten Commendmants for Detective Fiction" in 1929. This is the
kind of third-rate, bottom-of-the-barrel cliched tripe that could
actually damage to the genre had it not been so obscure. Only read it
if you're looking for an excuse to be pissed about something.
Death
Against Venus (1946)
by Dana Chambers
Chambers
was a better writer than Brennan, but only marginally better as a
plotter as this promising story ended up being an unimpressive,
tangled mess and not long-forgotten classic I was hoping to find. I
suppose they can't all be rediscovered gems or alternative classics.
Key
Without a Door (1988) by Anthony Lejeune
Another
novel that began promising enough with a man in pajamas vanishing
from the doorstep of his London home, but turned into a boring,
uninspired thriller after only three chapters. Just like with his
first novel, Mr.
Diabolo (1960), there's a gaping gap between the author's
aspirations and delivery.
Short
Stories:
"Peacock's
Cry" (2016) by Paul Doherty (reviewed together with "The King's
Writ")