H.M. Faust is a Croatia-born mystery writer who "primarily specializes in writing impossible crime stories" and "his main goal is to push the limits of the mystery genre, merging bizarre storylines and modern narrative techniques with the tropes of the Golden Age period of detective fiction" – who previously published his fiction under the pseudonymous acronym "DWaM." Jim Noy reviewed three of his stories back in 2020 and Stephen M. Pierce compiled "The DWaM Top 5." So pretty much an underground phenomenon, but one that's beginning to claw its way to the surface.
Back in December, Faust published Gospel of V (2023) on Amazon with the intention to eventual re-release all his previous work starting with a short story collection and his longest work to date, An Odyssey to the Castle of Vampires (2023). Earlier this year, Faust dropped me an e-mail to ask if I wanted to read Gospel of V without strings attached or even expecting a review. Naturally, I wanted to the read his take on the locked room mystery. And, of course, I'm going to review it!
Gospel of V is a meta-detective novel with a dual narrative alternating between a fictitious, unpublished manuscript and two mystery fiction obsessed editors discussing the story. So a mystery novel promising to make for a fascinating read and an interesting highlight in the inevitable addendum to "The Locked Room Mystery & Impossible Crime Story in the 21st Century."The first half of this dual narrative is the manuscripts part, titled The Fall of House Cosmigrove, which introduces the Cosmigroves headed by their dying patriarch, Joseph Cosmigrove – a genius scholar and "revolutionary voice of the century." Joseph Cosmigrove has four children with the oldest, Mundus, groomed from birth to become his successor ("Mundus' only crime was being born first"). His brothers and sisters were spared their brother's fate, but they were expected to excel in their assigned or chosen disciplines. Sofia choose music and became one of the most successful violin players in the world. Constantin took up the brush, "he, like Mundus, was forbidden from sculpting," to garner fame by "painting scenes of sculptures." Ishmael Cosmigrove became a writer, "a mystery writer of little renown," who presumably narrates the story, but curiously is never mentioned by name. Mundus remained with his father as his siblings scattered to pursue their disciplines, but returned when Joseph Cosmigrove became gravely ill. Cosmigrove told his son to sell the old house and move them somewhere more suitable to recover or die. But the moment the family reunites, strange things start to happen.
After their first night back together under one roof, the household discovers someone has dug a large, deep and rectangle-shaped hole in the garden with a human skeleton lying at the bottom of it! A garden surrounded by an electrified, ten-feet tall fence. So who buried it and why? When they bring the skeleton to the collection room for a closer examination, the door bell rings and find a young, disheveled man on their doorstep. The young man introduces himself as Lane Prospero and announces, "I'm a Great Detective." Lane Prospero urgently needs to speak to Joseph Cosmigrove, but the family immediately suspect the whole thing is a setup and begin banging on about the skeleton in the garden. But when they want to show the skeleton, it has disappeared from the locked collection room. This is not the last impossibility of the story!
The second half of the dual narrative follows Sparrow and Chariot, senior editors of "a niche venture dedicated to putting out amateur detective fiction" ("...Chief was a huge fan of Japanese writer Yukito Ayatsuji"), who are assigned to go over an unpublishable manuscript – The Fall of House Cosmigrove by Virgil Hesse. A one-day fly who made a splash a few years ago without ever writing a followup to his bestselling debut. Or so it appeared. Hesse delivered the manuscript of The Fall of House Cosmigrove to his editor with the urgent message to publish it "in case anything happened to him," before disappearing from the face of the earth. The chapters featuring the two editors are my favorite part of the book as they dissect the manuscript, throw out observations and critical comments or trying to construct their own solutions ("insert the obligatory locked room lecture here"). More importantly, they give a voice to the critical reader and armchair detective raising an eyebrow at how the manuscript unfolds. To quote Sparrow, "he's aware of the tropes. He understands the concept of impossible crimes. He understands the general flow of detective logic. But there's no – I don't know how to even describe it – mysterious events are happening, but that's about it." Those mysterious events in the manuscript begin to pile up quickly.
Most notably, the seemingly impossible murder of Joseph Cosmigrove. Stabbed to death in his bedroom, while his male nurse was standing outside the door. I also enjoyed how much Faust got out of the stabbing in the locked library and the skeleton's disappearance from the collection room by playing on some of the normally oldest, cliched tropes of the locked room mystery. A fantastic example of what can be achieved when you know, understand and are willing to built on the history of the genre your working in. Particularly if your intention is to take the detective story apart and reassemble it in a different order. In that regard, Faust delivered on the statement that Gospel of V is "built in honor and deconstruction of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction" to "keep readers guessing until the very end." Who knew you can use a deconstructionist approach to create, like cutting new shapes with a pair of hedge clippers, instead of being wielded like a sledge hammer to destroy? Purely as a locked room mystery, it's the solution to Joseph Cosmigrove's murder giving the book a future claim as one of the impossible crime classics of the 2020s! Now this specific locked room-trick is at its core-idea not brand new, but the previous examples that spring to mind are terribly basic and dressed down by comparison. Faust really went to work on it and something only made possible by the ambigious, often bizarre structure of the novel. My description of Gospel of V has so far done no justice to that important aspect of the overall story.
Just to give an idea, Gospel of V has a rather useless "A Challenge to the Reader" after the halfway mark followed by an Intermission with the subtitle "The Jesus Christ Murder Case." It's a short story within a dual narrative rewriting the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ as an unexpectedly good locked room mystery. Surprisingly, the sealed cave has very little to do with it! And a very intermission for a detective story with a biblical touch to the plot and characters. After all, the story begins with stating that the conception of Cosmigrove's children were all immaculate ("and so great was Joseph Cosmigrove that he had himself a different Mary for each of his four miracles'). Or the excellent chapter in which the gruesome crime scene described in the manuscript is finally discovered and the deduction chapters in which Sparrow and Chariot drag out the solution. I was immensely satisfied with the conclusion to this ambitious meta-detective novel and locked room mystery with multiple, well-handled impossibilities with one absolute standout or simply how it toyed with the role of the Great Detective. So it's almost petty to start nitpicking about a small, nagging detail, but I've to do it.
This contains a small, but not unimportant, spoiler (ROT13): gur fgbel boivbhfyl gnxrf cynpr va gur abg fb qvfgnag cnfg naq ebhtuyl jura vf, rknpgyl, n ovt zlfgrel, ohg abg bhgevtug fgngrq. Jura gur Terng Qrgrpgvir nccrnef ba gur fprar, Cebfcreb vf erzrzorerq nf univat orra “va gur zvqqyr bs Gur Erq Dhrra Zheqref onpx va '85” jvgu nabgure yvar fgngvat gung gur zheqref unccrarq guerr lrnef ntb. Vg'f riraghnyyl erirnyrq gur Fcneebj naq Punevbg puncgref gnxr cynpr va 1987 jvgu gur npghny znff zheqre qrfpevorq va gur znahfpevcg unccravat va 1985. Gung pbashfrq zr nf V fhfcrpgrq guebhtubhg gur fgbel V jnf orvat zvfyrnq nobhg gur lrne va juvpu vg gnxrf cynpr. Sbe rknzcyr, gur bcravat puncgre zragvbaf gur fvoyvatf bppnfvbanyyl r-znvyrq va gur gra lrnef fvapr yrnivat ubzr, juvpu frrzf hayvxryl sbe '85 be '87. V qba'g guvax vg jnf rira pnyyrq r-znvy hagvy gur rneyl 1990f. Va 1987, Lhxvgb Nlngfhwv'f unq whfg choyvfurq Gur Qrpntba Ubhfr Zheqref. Fb ubj pna ur rira or ersreerq gb nf n zlfgrel jevgre “jub serdhragyl rzcyblrq gur gebcr bs univat gjb cnenyyry aneengvirf unccravat va gur fnzr obbx”? Pbhcyrq jvgu gur ntrf bs gur punenpgref, V fhfcrpgrq gur fgbel ernyyl gbbx cynpr fbzrgvzr orgjrra 1995 naq 2005, juvpu sbe fbzr ernfba unq gb or bofpherq. That was a bit distracting at times as I keep looking how that could figure into the story. It didn't.
Other than that little inconsistency, Faust penned a fair play meta-locked room mystery as deceiving and ambitiously constructed as it's written with its "wishy-washy first person narration" belying its deviously original and tricky plot – expertly hidden underneath it all. Some knowledge and awareness of Golden Age-style detective fiction and locked room mysteries in general is required, because you won't fully appreciate Gospel of V otherwise. But, when you do, it's a fascinating and engrossing read from start to finish. Particularly in light of recent developments.
I'm seeing two different strains of impossible crime fiction, and writers, evolve from the current locked room revival in front of my eyes! On the one hand, you have, what can be called, the traditionalists who came out or can be tied to the reprint renaissance. These writers include Tom Mead, J.S. Savage and Gigi Pandian whose locked room mysteries aim to restore the fair play detective story to its former glory and cite John Dickson Carr and Clayton Rawson as their main influence. On the other hand, you have the as of now unnamed strain (mavericks?) influenced by the translation wave and especially the Japanese shin honkaku writers. A movement that revitalized the traditional detective story in Japan with their college-age detectives, corpse-puzzles, strange architecture and a fresh take on the impossible crime problem. You can find these ideas applied to the Western genre in the locked room mysteries by James Scott Byrnside, A. Carver, Faust and Noy's The Red Death Murders (2022). Interesting times, indeed!
Thanks for reading! Once again, definitely happy to see you liked it so much!
ReplyDeleteRegarding the thing you spotted (ROT13): V'z snveyl pregnva (vs zrzbel freirf) gung r-znvy fubhyq'ir orra nebhaq va gur 80f. V guvax lbh unq gb unir fcrpvny znpuvarf, ohg V'z pregnva gung vg jbhyq'ir orra nebhaq -- whfg abg unaqyrq ivn gur genqvgvbany Vagrearg. Gung fnvq, V cebonoyl qvq raq hc trggvat zl qngrf n yvggyr pbashfrq jura vg pbzrf gb Qrpntba'f eryrnfr qngr... fbzr ernfba V zhfg'ir tbggra vg va zl urnq gung ur chg bhg Qrpntba va gur rneyl 80f.
Yes, (ROT13), r-znvy jnf nebhaq va gur 1980f, ohg irel qvssrerag naq yrff npprffvoyr gb gur ynetre choyvp hagvy r-znvy, zber be yrff nf jr xabj vg gbqnl, pnzr nebhaq va gur '90f. Fb gbbx gur guebjnjnl yvar lbh fb pnfhnyyl cynagrq nobhg gur fvoyvatf znvyvat rnpu qhevat gurve gra lrne crevbq njnl sebz ubzr nf n pyhr gung gur fgbel gnxrf cynpr fbzrgvzr va gur frpbaq-unys bs gur avargvrf be rneyl 2000f. Fnzr tbrf sbe gur ersrerapr gb Gur Qrpntba Ubhfr Zheqref.
DeleteBesides that little hiccup in time, I really enjoyed and liked your take on the locked room mystery. And very much look forward to whatever comes next.
As the premier DWaM scholar, I'm glad to see you enjoyed this one as well. Definitely check out Tower of Babel if you haven't yet. It essentially has this book's trick turned up to 11, and it's not a very long read.
ReplyDeleteI noticed your were razor quick in claiming that title. ;D Thanks for the recommendation, but hope "this book's trick turned up to 11" is not spoiler!
DeleteNah it’s just similarly insane, but has very little in common with it otherwise. I doubt you could solve it with just that knowledge. But if you do, you can blame Byrnside—he said the same thing in his review!
ReplyDeleteSo different in method, similar in insanity? The mind boggles with possibilities! I now have a mental image of (ROT13, just in case) gur gvghyne gbjre pbzcevfvat bs gjb cnegf, na bhgre furyy (gur rkgrevbe) naq gur vafvqr, jbexvat yvxr n Tenaq Thvtaby ryringbe. Gur vafvqr pna or ergenprq vagb gur tebhaq, juvyr gur bhgre furyy erznvaf fgnaqvat. Vg pna or hfrq gb genc gur punenpgref vafvqr naq creuncf gb perngrq n ybpxrq ebbz fvghngvba be gjb. But perhaps such an engineering feat is too ambitious even for these type of impossible crime stories.
DeleteIf that's the insanity baseline, I suspect you won't be disappointed
DeleteI just ordered Gospel of V on the strength of your review and that of James Scott Byrnside. I like to change up my GAD and neo-GAD reading to keep it fresh. This looks like a good way to do so.
ReplyDeleteI can at least guarantee Gospel of V is going to change up and keep your (neo) GAD reading fresh. The rest is up for you to decide, but hope you'll enjoy and appreciate it as well.
DeleteI just finished this and a few times along the way, I wondered what the heck I was reading. Nevertheless, this was an engaging read and I chuckled at the challenge to reader, which was perfectly written for this book.
DeleteCredit to Faust / DWaM for the temerity to bring this all together at the end. I was ready to be disappointed by an ambiguous ending open to interpretation but then pleased when the multiple plot threads were woven brilliantly together in a way that made sense by the end. Indeed "truth is not truth, deduction is truth". Well done to Faust / DWaM.
P.S. rot13 V jbexrq va gur VG vaqhfgel sbe 39 lrnef naq rznvy jnf ninvynoyr va gur 80f nyorvg ivn znvasenzr pbzchgref. Crbcyr bhgfvqr bs npnqrzvn be ynetr pbecbengrf jbhyq arvgure unir urneq bs rznvy abe hfrq vg. Jbhyqa'g vg unir orra fvzcyre gb ercynpr "rznvyrq" jvgu "pbzzhavpngrq"; guhf yrnivat bhg gur ubj gurl qvq gung?
I told you it would shake up and keep your (neo) GAD reading fresh! :D
DeleteROT13 Gung'f jul gung pbzzrag nobhg rznvyvat naq ersrerapr gb Gur Qrpntba Ubhfr Zheqref guerj zr bss. Shaal ubj gubfr gjb guebjnjnl ersreraprf qrenvyrq gur puebabybtl bs gur fgbel. Whfg oynzr gur haeryvnoyr aneengbe, Snhfg.
Ol gur jnl, unir lbh ernq Ryyra Tbqserl'f 1988 Zheqre Oruvaq Ybpxrq Qbbef? Vg'f nobhg na vzcbffvoyr zheqre va gur freire ebbz bs n qngn cebprffvat-naq fbsgjner qrirybczrag pbzcnal, juvpu lbh zvtug svaq vagrerfgvat pbafvqrevat lbhe VG onpxtebhaq. Vg'f abg n onq ybpxrq ebbz zlfgrel, rvgure.
Thanks for the tip. Murder Behind Locked Doors by Ellen Godfrey is a new for me so I will give it a look. A quick check from the usual sources shows used copies available at reasonable prices.
DeleteOn totally different note, you never post anything about arthur Conan Doyle??
ReplyDeleteI've mentioned Conan Doyle and referenced the Sherlock Holmes stories often enough on the blog, but yes, it's been a while since I read them. Maybe it's time to revisit The Sign of Four and The Hound of the Baskervilles or fanboy all over "Silver Blaze" or "The Musgrave Ritual."
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