google-site-verification: googlef64103236b9f4855.html Philly Reader: February 2015

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Mrs. Murdock Takes a Case by George Harmon Coxe

Kent Murdock, chief photographer for the Courier Herald, is the main character in several of George Harmon Coxe's novels; but in this book, Kent is just too busy so his wife, Joyce, steps in and sets out to solve a  mystery.

Ward Allen is a good looking young man who is working for an investment firm which is headed by Dean Thorndike. Ward, however, has some things in his past in South America which he would like to be kept quiet. Ward is hoping to marry Delia Stewart who is an attractive young woman, and a rather distant relative of Dean Thorndike. She met Ward in Thorndike's office and is now desperately in love with Ward.  Delia, Ward, and Joyce are having dinner out one evening when Perry Clark shows up at the restaurant. Clark and Ward had know each other in South America, and Joyce Murdock saw that Ward was angry enough with Clark over something in the past to want to kill him.

Kent, Joyce, Delia, and Ward go to a party which has been given by Hestor Losado who was the first wife of Kent. She has certainly lost none of her charms since they got divorced. She has been married to Perry Clark, divorced him, and married Miguel Losado, a older man who was quite wealthy and has since died leaving Hestor quite a lot of money which is being managed by Dean Thorndike.

Delia Stewart learns that Perry Clark has papers which Ward Allen wants very much to obtain. Hoping to get the papers for Ward, Delia goes to Clark's apartment. She steals the papers, but while she is hiding in another room, Clark is murdered by someone whom Delia does not see, but she fears that the murderer might to Ward. Panicked, Delia tells all to Joyce Murdock who decides to help her out.

There are many twists and turns in this book. The reader is advised to keep an eye on who is where when, and who has what when. There will be another murder, and there will be added complications from Hestor's finances, and the political situation in the Caragua in South America.

This book was published in 1941. It is out of print, but used copies are available. Readers of Golden Age mysteries may frequently say to themselves that things would proceed differently with today's technology of DNA analyses and cell phones. Once you have read the description in this book of the difficulty of making a photocopy in 1941, you may be quite grateful for modern copying machines.


Wednesday, February 11, 2015

The Blotting Book by E. F. Benson

A mystery novel might be the last thing that regular readers of E. F. Benson would have expected him to write. Benson wrote almost 100 books which were comical novels, sentimental fiction, ghost stories, and informal biographies. Modern TV viewers will know him for the  Channel 4 Mapp and Lucia series which starred the late Geraldine McEwan. However, in 1908, Benson wrote his one and only mystery, The Blotting Book.

Morris Assheton had come to live in his mother's home in Brighton after completing his four years at Cambridge. Morris was a carefree young man who loved his new motorcar, and who was hoping to marry the attractive Madge Templeton, the daughter of Sir Richard Templeton. Morris' finances have been cared for by Mr. Taynton, a slightly corpulent man of sixty though he looks younger. Morris would come in control of his funds when he was twenty five, or when he got married. Morris was now twenty two. Mr. Taynton requested that Morris look over his books to ensure that Tayton was making the best possible investments. He told Morris that his original 30,000 pounds had grown to 40,000 which pleased Morris to no end, and Morris saw no reason to waste time looking at accounts when he could be driving his new car.

Mr. Taynton, however, was lying to Morris. The money had indeed grown to 40,000 pounds which Taynton had used to make very bad investments which lost most of the funds. He had now invested the remainder in copper shares and had great hopes for them. His partner, Godfrey Mills, knew about this bit of financial mishandling, and upset Mr. Taynton by refusing to take any responsibility for the losses. He was essentially blackmailing Mr. Taynton.  In addition, Mills planned to put off any thought of a marriage  by going to Sir Richard and saying that Morris was a highly irresponsible young man who could not be trusted to marry his daughter.

Mills did go Sir Richard before he took a planned trip to London on Thursday. Morris was furious when Sir Richard told what had been said about him. He tried to see Mills when he returned from London, but Mills did not return. Both Taynton and Morris tried repeatedly to see Mills who did not return. Then Mill's body was found, and Morris was arrested for the murder. Superintendent Figgis, the policemen in change of the case, ranks as one of the most stupid in detective literature. The case against Morris would go to trial where all would be made clear, and the murderer revealed.

This book proceeds in a leisurely manner with atmospheric descriptions and a certain charm which makes it a part of the time in which it was written which was 1908 at the beginning of the golden age of mystery fiction. Austin Freeman's Mystery of the Red Thumb Mark had been published in 1907, and Mary Roberts Rinehart was starting her second novel. Agatha Christie would not publish her first novel for 12 more years.

The paperback copy which I read was published in 1987 by The Hogarth Press, and has an introduction by Stephen Knight. This novel is still in print, and a Kindle edition is available for free.