
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
This first book of the more-than-20-book-long Campion series is unusual in a few ways, some of them good, some bad, and some just... unusual.
Firstly, it's more a thriller than it is a mystery story. There's very little time spent on investigating the crime, which is the fatal stabbing of an elderly man at a country-house party during a game played with the lights off. This is partly because there aren't many clues; the protagonist eventually works it out based on the logic of who might have had a motive - though even then he doesn't know what the motive might be, exactly - and by doing some library research, the results of which we don't learn until the big reveal scene. Mainly, though, nobody is too focused on the mystery because they are busy for most of the book being held captive by a ruthless international criminal, who has come to the house to pick up plans for a huge bank robbery that have now gone missing. This provides plenty of tension and action, as the guests strive unsuccessfully to escape.
Unfortunately, the resolution involves a massive deus ex machina right at the last moment, and all of the plans and courage and actions of the party go for nothing. That's the "bad" I referred to.
The other somewhat unusual thing is that Campion, who would go on to be the series hero, is a secondary character here. The protagonist is a pathologist, a consultant to Scotland Yard, who is a friend of the house party's host. Campion has inserted himself into the party for his own purposes, and reveals in the course of the book that he is some kind of shadowy freelance operative with a casual attitude to law and order, under the guise, which never slips, of an upper-class twit. He's like Lord Peter Wimsey (who first appeared six years earlier, in 1923), if Lord Peter never dropped the pose and wasn't always ethical. There may be a bit of Arsene Lupin in there too, and (given Campion's hinted-at origins), some Cleek of the Forty Faces, though without the disguise schtick.
It's not the only example of a famous detective who wasn't the main character in his first book; Charlie Chan in The House Without a Key (1925) is also a secondary character. I suspect that the author decided after writing the book that Campion was more interesting than the rather staid pathologist, and decided to write more about him.
Because Campion is interesting, though annoying, and even though the great clanging deus ex machina drags the book down to the Bronze tier of my annual recommendation list, it does make it to the list because it's fluently written, suspenseful, and shows a lot of potential. There isn't the complexity of a mystery by, say, Freeman Wills Crofts or R. Austin Freeman, or the sophistication and humane empathy of a Dorothy L. Sayers, but it's good enough that I'd definitely read another by the same author.
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