Wednesday, 13 August 2025

Review: KARL GRIER: the strange story of a man with a sixth sense

KARL GRIER: the strange story of a man with a sixth sense KARL GRIER: the strange story of a man with a sixth sense by Louis Tracy
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The casual racism is strong with this one - against the Jewish and Armenian characters, mainly, but any foreigner who appears in it is, at best, an amusing lesser being, even when not being explicitly compared to an ape. This takes my rating down from what was already not going to be a particularly high level.

It's not a mystery. It is, for its day, science-fictional, though the science is utter bunk (as was the style at the time), and the Fortean stories told in support of its plausibility are deeply implausible. The title character has psychic powers, which develop in childhood and enable him to clairvoyantly predict an attack on a neighbour from his father's tea plantation in India. This neighbour's daughter Maggie becomes his love interest later in the book.

While still a child, on the way to England for his education, he saves the life of a young Armenian businessman (with the not particularly Armenian surname of Constantine) who falls off the ship as they are leaving India. Young Karl guides the searchers using his clairvoyant ability. This Armenian later becomes an antagonist when he becomes interested in Maggie, now an 18-year-old violinist, and recruits his associate Stendhal, who is half Polish Jew and half Mexican, to corrupt her and deliver her to Constantine.

Karl observes this plot from across the Atlantic and decides he must protect Maggie, from which point various complications ensue.

The narrator is a journalist, probably a largely unaltered version of the actual author, who meets Karl and becomes involved, as does a university friend of Karl's, an American also studying at Oxford.

There's quite a bit of melodrama, and (going along with the narrator's reflections on the stiff-upper-lip character of the British, which Karl joins in, even though he is half Scots and half German), at the moments of highest emotion the prose becomes as stiff as so much cardboard. The plot mostly consists of the relationships between the various characters, which is fine, but it's a bit overwrought and doesn't, for me, ever rise above being mildly entertaining.

Would have been a bottom-tier recommendation, if not for the prominence of the racism.

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Monday, 11 August 2025

Review: News from nowhere

News from nowhere News from nowhere by William Morris
My rating: 0 of 5 stars

A utopian novel, hence the title - "Nowhere" being the English translation of "Utopia". (Eighteen years before, Samuel Butler had titled his utopian novel set in New Zealand Erewhon , which is, more or less, "Nowhere" backwards).

Specifically, it's an anarchist libertarian socialist utopian novel, and even more specifically, a William Morris anarchist libertarian socialist utopian novel. It's partly a response to the industrialist state socialist utopian novel Looking Backward: 2000-1887 , published three years earlier, to which Morris had given a critical review in The Commonweal, the Socialist League's newspaper, in which News from Nowhere was first serialized.

I say it's very specifically William Morris because it carries all his hallmarks. The world of the anarchist communist future is strongly influenced by the Middle Ages (by which I think he intends the "high middle ages," since the Middle Ages went on for some time) aesthetically, though of course it's organized as completely differently as one could imagine, and religion is conspicuous by its absence; and part of the reason the whole thing works is that everyone is into arts and crafts, and has cultivated the enjoyment of whatever work they choose to do - a more-or-less reasonable counter to the frequent criticism of socialism that, without market incentives, people in a socialist utopia wouldn't choose to work. It's opposed to the industrialization that he hated, too. He even drops the occasional Morrisian medievalism into the text, such as saying "gave me the sele of the day" rather than "said good morning to me," or calling men "carles". By this point, writing like that was presumably a habit for him.

Having read several of his other works, I knew he was neither a misogynist nor a feminist, and here that takes the form of assuming - and stating the assumption - that women would naturally enjoy the work of being mothers and managing households, so that's what they mostly do, though we do see a female stonecarver, and of course there are no laws to say that they can't do whatever they like. There are no laws to say that anyone can't do whatever they like, nor is there any government or other apparatus to enforce those laws if they existed, but somehow everyone lives more or less peacefully, all the necessary work gets done by people who enjoy doing it, and society just regulates itself by peer pressure in its most positive form. Marriage is not a contract, and divorce requires no court, because there's no property and no law, so people move in and out of relationships freely. Love rivalries are more or less the only major source of continuing disputes, and occasionally someone kills someone else over them, but his neighbours all make him feel ashamed of it, and he does what he can to atone for it. Anyone who actually likes murder and violence is treated as being ill, but because it's a society of free and happy people whose freedom makes them healthy and well-adjusted, this is much rarer than was once the case. They also age more slowly, and are generally good-looking; the narrator admires various young women considerably, in a slightly creepy male-gazey way.

It's an optimistic view of human nature, one that I'm skeptical about myself. The transition from Morris's society to this one also proceeds in a way that I found implausible.

The transition happened, in the story, in the 1950s, about a century prior to the time Morris's narrator is transported to from Morris's own time. (The narrator probably represents Morris himself, since he gives his name as William - though he asks everyone to call him "Guest" - and is the age Morris was at the time of writing, 56. That's partly why I found his admiration of the young women slightly creepy.)

It's your basic socialist revolution, with labour organizing against terrible conditions, but organizing so effectively that it threatens the government of the day, leading to a civil war which the government loses - largely because the socialists wisely won't fight pitched battles, but instead get the sympathy of the vast majority of the people on their side. Over the following generation, society enters a transformation to equality and freedom, and gradually they decide, or realize, that in order to enjoy their work they need to approach it with a craft mindset. They get rid of any industrialization that doesn't serve the kind of society they want, and if anything requires work to be done that nobody wants to do without being forced to it, they do without that thing (or else invent a machine to do it for them, though that last point is de-emphasized). There's a handwaved and little-discussed invention that powers things with "force" instead of polluting steam, but most transport is powered by muscles, either human or animal. The resulting society is de-urbanized; most of London's buildings are removed and replaced with gardens, and many urban people return to the land, because that's where the work they want to do is. This raises the educational level of the country people, too, though by the time of the story, everyone is (as we would say today) unschooling; people, young and old, learn what they want when they want to, with no formal education system, though centres of learning remain.

While it's a society not without its discontents (such as a grumbling old man the narrator's boating party up the Thames encounters at Runnymede), they're a minority, and the majority all easily agree on what is best to do - which is the thing that Morris thinks is the best to do, naturally. This was another difficult swallow for me. I've never seen a society that organizes itself without either central control or a market economy, of course, but I know neither of those produces optimal results all the time, or even that often, and I feel like there's a lot of handwaving involved in believing that this one could be optimal or anything close to it just because nearly everyone (in the aftermath of a civil war, remember) somehow shares a vision of what the good life consists of, without any indoctrination or philosophical disputation going on. I suspect that the nature of the good life seemed so self-evident to Morris that he didn't feel the need to justify it, even though he was such a minority voice in his own time, and even among his own socialist peers.

Another handwavey aspect is about exactly how the working classes are going to elevate themselves. As the boating party travels up the Thames, he continually fulminates about how much more beautiful it is without the ugly and pretentious "cockney" villas of the self-made industrialists - who came from exactly the same class that, supposedly, later had the socialist revolution that produced a society which universally adopted William Morris's neo-medievalist arts-and-crafts aesthetic. He does have an answer for this, and for my "but that's not how real people act" criticism: people's taste, and their basically good and cooperative human nature, are, in the present system, distorted away from the good by the fact that everyone is either oppressed or an oppressor. (I wonder which he saw himself as?) If everyone was free and equal, these issues would naturally go away.

That argument, of course, is not falsifiable without creating the entire society that Morris envisions and watching it fail. But small-scale experiments on similar lines do seem to suggest that people are always going to people - namely be petty, disputatious, jealous, and want to be in charge and get all the good things that are going at the expense of others - unless you take active measures to stop them, and indeed even then. Morris's characters don't act like real people (in this or any other book of his that I've read), any more than they talk like real people, and I think in this case that reveals a blind spot.

Still, I tried to keep an open mind as I read, and I did find some things to agree with. I think Morris is broadly correct in believing that if everyone was able to choose work they found fulfilling, they would be happier and healthier, and society would be better off. I also agree with him that this would usually involve putting creativity and pride into one's work, approaching it like a craft, or, if it was pure physical labour, as a form of pleasurable exercise with a useful result. The question I'm left with is: Do we have to wait for the destruction of capitalism in order for this to be true? And I'm inclined to answer "no". As, to be fair, I believe Morris was also.

Finally, does it work as a novel? Utopian novels aren't typically rich in plot; they're what's sometimes called "milieu" stories, about the exploration of a place and a situation. In this case, the place is a transformed version of one Morris and many of his readers were very familiar with, London and the reaches of the Thames; the house that the story ends up at is Morris's own house, Kelmscott Manor, which surely is symbolic. There's a little bit of romance, both in the form of a couple who are reconciling after the woman has gone off with someone else for a while, and in Guest's attraction to the daughter of the grumbling man at Runnymede. But mostly it's a journey through a landscape with attention being drawn to the differences for the better from the 19th-century versions of the same places, punctuated by history lessons in dialog form. One actually stops being narrated as a scene and becomes a dialog between two people as in a play, or perhaps a Socratic dialog - but without the disagreement, since Guest is already fully on board with the changes that have happened; he just wants to understand them better.

It's not everyone's meat as a novel, in other words, and the fiction is very much in service to the ideas. The characters in Morris always resemble medieval drawings - somewhat stiff and two-dimensional - and while the dialog here isn't as faux-medieval as in most of his works, as I've noted above, it does sport the occasional medievalism.

Still, I found it enjoyable, with well-written descriptions, especially of nature, or rather managed nature (like gardens and fields). Convincing as a philosophical argument? No. But as a window into the thought of a man full of contradictions but a considerable force in his own time, interesting.

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Friday, 8 August 2025

Review: Mistress of Bees

Mistress of Bees Mistress of Bees by Bernie Mojzes
My rating: 0 of 5 stars

DNF at 56%, when the darkness finally overcame me.

The Mistress of Bees of the title is a sorceress from a poor background. Seemingly abandoned or lost by her parents as a small child, she was helped by a street urchin a couple of years older. They became friends, companions, lovers, had a huge breakup in their mid-teens over some stupid things they both did (mostly her) that meant they had to leave the city, then she did various unsavoury things in order to survive. It was in the mid-book flashback to these years that I left her.

Sure, it's understandable, given her background, that she fell into prostitution, theft, drug use, and eventually murder. It doesn't make me like her, though I did like her somewhat at first; she's wryly funny, determined, has no respect for authority (again, understandable), and while she doesn't have much in the way of a moral sense, she does draw the line at standing by while innocents are killed if she can prevent it. Though in the very first of this linked series of stories, she herself kills innocents who were about to be killed by a monster, in order to destroy it and protect the rest of the world. She regrets it, but you know she'd do it again if she had the choice a second time.

The whole book is dark like that. She's not good at making friends, but the ones she does make all die, some of them horribly, at least one because she made a bad decision. In the end, it was too much for me. It isn't grimdark, quite, because she does at least have good intentions and is sometimes able to act on them and help people, at least for a while. But it's not truly noblebright either; at best, it's noblegrimy. It reminded me, especially early on, of Garth Nix's Sir Hereward and Mister Fitz: Stories of the Witch Knight and the Puppet Sorcerer : sword-and-sorcery setting, morally grey protagonist(s), dark deeds done for the protection of the world. But it's darker and more depressing than that.

It is well written for the most part, though I'll mention a couple of faults I saw in the pre-publication version I got via Netgalley; they may be fixed in the published book. Firstly, some vocabulary issues, most prominently the consistent use of "discrete" when the author means "discreet," an error even good writers make. But more importantly, and less likely to end up completely corrected, a lot of the apostrophes are either in the wrong place - particularly when plurals are involved - or missing entirely (including in an "its" that should be "it's").

Overall, this is a good book that isn't a good fit for this reader, unfortunately, though I did enjoy some aspects of it.

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Wednesday, 6 August 2025

Review: The Secret Adversary

The Secret Adversary The Secret Adversary by Agatha Christie
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I'm reasonably sure this was a re-read, but only because I remembered one plot point (the spelling of Tuppence's name in a note). If I had read it before, it was many years ago, probably in a copy belonging to my grandmother. It's the first in a series about a pair of adventurers/detectives who, in this book unemployed after WWI (they'd been a soldier and a nurse), decide to become more or less mercenaries taking on anything that comes along. What coincidentally comes along is a search for a missing young woman who may know the whereabouts of a secret document which could precipitate terrible political chaos if made public.

The plot, while doing the usual "red scare/conspiracy theory" thing of the time, is a complicated and exciting one, full of red herrings. There's sustained tension about which of two apparently helpful characters is leaking information to the antagonists. There are plenty of sinister opponents, though it remains cozy, and nobody we're meant to like is seriously harmed. The detective duo are likeable, and, as the spymaster comments, complement each other: Tuppence is the smart-but-headstrong one, Tommy the solidly reliable but not too clever one.

The thing is, though, for most of the book they are not working together, since first one and then the other goes off and gets captured by the adversaries. Absence works to make the heart grow fonder, and since they had known each other for years before the story starts I'm not going to call it a thin romance, even though they spend so little time together during the plot. I will ding the other romance as thin, though.

There's an American character who speaks, I suspect, stereotypically rather than typically for an actual American of the time (and refers to the second story of a building as "the first floor," which is what British but not American people call it). Still, his hustle and do-it-now approach moves the plot along and provides amusement. The various characters are all distinct, and there's plenty of courage involved in bringing the whole business to a conclusion.

Tommy and Tuppence are not rated as highly as Poirot and Miss Marple among Christie's detectives, but their adventures here are enjoyable. Unusually, Christie aged them in real time for their subsequent appearances, which makes me want to read the other books.

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Monday, 4 August 2025

Review: The Seven Dials Mystery

The Seven Dials Mystery The Seven Dials Mystery by Agatha Christie
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This was a delight, and honestly that was mostly because it's less like an Agatha Christie book and more like a P.G. Wodehouse book that's got entangled with an Edgar Wallace book, to the enhancement of both. In the end, I didn't feel like Christie quite brought off the secret society where everyone wears clock-face masks, because there wasn't any real reason for that other than creating an atmosphere. But it's genuinely funny (not as funny as Wodehouse, but funny in his manner), genuinely suspenseful (again, not as much so as Wallace, but in a similar way), has a great Christie twist that I didn't see coming whatsoever, and in general was fun enough and well-executed enough that I bumped it up to the Gold tier of my annual recommendation list.

The noble owner of Chimneys, the house that features so centrally in the first book in the series, has a strong Lord Emsworth vibe. His daughter Bundle is both a Wodehouse New Woman (irrepressible, headstrong, and capable) and a Wallace New Woman (capable, headstrong, and irrepressible), and acts as the main protagonist. The serious, bespectacled secretary is, of course, reminiscent of the Efficient Baxter, and is even frequently given the adjective "efficient," though he's not as much the butt of jokes as Baxter. The manservant Stevens is a less central, but still imperturbable and capable version of Jeeves. "Codders," the politician from the first book, whose besetting fault is that he speaks to one as if addressing a public meeting, is in fine form. There are multiple proposals, several murders, rapid travel in two-seater cars, brave deeds in the night, several pistols (automatics, incorrectly called revolvers at times, which was still a common mistake at this period), and the traditional settings of great country houses and London clubs.

Overall, a good ride, and I recommend it.

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Review: The Secret of Chimneys

The Secret of Chimneys The Secret of Chimneys by Agatha Christie
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Unlike Poirot and Miss Marple, Superintendent Battle is one of those police detectives with minimal personality such as you'd find in a book by Freeman Wills Crofts, though despite his stolid manner and wooden, expressionless face, he does have a twinkle in his eye and an underlying intelligence which individualizes him.

This is a mystery based in international politics, and Battle is there to investigate the murder of an incognito prince who was about to become the restored monarch of "Herzoslovakia," a Balkan country, with the support of the British government and a consortium that wants to exploit its oil. Somewhere in the background is a notorious French/Irish criminal, a master of disguise, who's searching for a concealed jewel secreted in the house known as Chimneys some years earlier. The murder has occurred at Chimneys, and the place is crawling with VIPs, investigators, and their associates.

The cast includes a bombastic politician, known, because of his bulging eyes, as "Codders" to the disrespectful, which includes his rather dense and lazy secretary; the ineffectual nobleman who owns Chimneys and his bright and active daughter Bundle; the steel magnate who has rented Chimneys for a time, and his discontented wife; a beautiful young widow; and, centrally, a rough-and-tumble young man who has come over from South Africa to do a couple of Herzoslovakia-adjacent favours for a friend, taking that friend's name for the purpose, and becoming involved in the whole mess partly by coincidence. (view spoiler)

I didn't see the twist coming, and it's a good one. Battle is an effective investigator, and I enjoyed him, and the whole milieu, enough that I went almost straight on to the second in the series, which is even better.

I did give this one my "casual-racism" tag, partly because of the portrayal of the Jewish financier, and partly because of the free use of the word "Dago" early on and the reaction to the possibility, late in the book, that someone might have married an African woman. It very nearly got my "thin-romance" tag as well, since a big slice of the development of the main romance takes place offscreen, but it did at least have some development through the couple spending time together, so it dodges that tag in the end.

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Review: The Man Who Knew

The Man Who Knew The Man Who Knew by Edgar Wallace
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The title refers to a kind of savant character who researches and remembers facts about everyone and everything. It's somewhat misleading, though. (view spoiler)

Even though the solution is something of a letdown, the journey to it is enjoyable, with lots of clues and red herrings and running hither and yon, ranging as far afield as Switzerland. The core plot involves the murder of a curmudgeonly old man who has made a lot of money by sometimes dubious methods, and an associated bank fraud. The old man's nephew is put on trial for the murder. Weaving in and out of the narrative is Mr. Mann, the Man who Knew.

It's a classic Wallace mystery, and even though the twist ending blindsided and disappointed me, I did enjoy it up to that point.

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Wednesday, 30 July 2025

Review: The Secret House

The Secret House The Secret House by Edgar Wallace
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Classic Edgar Wallace: an intriguing title, a clever villain with (for the time) state-of-the-art technology, a calmly determined police detective who ends up in deadly danger, an appealing couple who have Troubles, a secondary villain who is up to no good but charming (in a foreign way; foreigners are, of course, automatically suspect and a bit strange), blackmail, murder, faked suicide, financial skullduggery, the mysterious house of the title with its secret panels and tunnels and lifts, the search for a missing heir under an unusual will, it's all here.

The ending is a bit abrupt and doesn't fully resolve everything, but I don't think it absolutely needs to. It's a strong point at which to end.

Wallace wasn't always that strong on continuity in his more quickly-written books, and the opening chapter of this one seems to be contradicted in minor ways in subsequent chapters, but if you don't think about it too hard and just imagine the well-described characters and their conflicts, it's fine.

Wallace's solidly written pulp novels consistently hit the Silver tier of my annual recommendation list. They don't have the depth of reflection or emotion to take them up to Gold, but they seldom have serious enough faults to drop them into Bronze. They're reliably good for the genre, and if you're in the mood for a pulp adventure, not written to a formula or leaning too hard into the silly tropes, but definitely right in the middle of what a pulp adventure is, picking up a Wallace is a sound move.

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Tuesday, 29 July 2025

Review: The Corbin Necklace

The Corbin Necklace The Corbin Necklace by Henry Kitchell Webster
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A family of rich Midwesterners (their grandfather came in and, someone actually says aloud, chased the Indians off a bunch of land and took it) are preparing for a wedding. The grandmother, still alive at an advanced age, is rumoured to be planning to give an heirloom pearl necklace to the young bride as a wedding gift. The young woman doesn't particularly want it, and in fact doesn't particularly want the groom, either, as it turns out, but feels obligated to accept both, for reasons which unfold.

There's a big coincidence at the heart of the plot, but since it's more to set things up than to resolve them I don't mind as much as I otherwise would. The pearl necklace is a classic McGuffin, and both it and its less-valuable duplicate disappear, reappear, and are generally complication and suspicion generators throughout.

The bride's name is Judy, and her younger brother is consequently known to one and all as Punch, though he's officially John Corbin III. He's a clever, loyal and courageous 13-year-old, who takes his responsibilities seriously, and considers preventing the theft of the necklace to be one of them. He's effective, too.

The family's neighbour, never named, is the narrator, mostly an observer of the action because of a broken leg, though he does facilitate a few conversations. There's an older man who seems to have a past as some sort of law enforcement agent, who takes effective action as well, and is one of those characters that you'd like to hear more stories about. (As far as I know, though, there were not any.)

The groom is, without being malicious or villainous, still thoroughly despicable in his adherence to his background's assumptions about what he's owed and who it's right to inconvenience so that he gets it. It's a relief to everyone when he finally departs. Meanwhile, the tyrannical old lady is more flexible and fair-minded than you might expect.

It's a genial mystery in which there are no murders and no police, and all of the characters are distinct, believable, and the possessors of some depth. The author was a prolific producer of fiction, who said once that to make a living from fiction you had to churn out a lot of possibly inferior stuff, but this is decent, by the standards of the time and of today.

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Monday, 28 July 2025

Review: The Man in the Brown Suit

The Man in the Brown Suit The Man in the Brown Suit by Agatha Christie
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This started out very promising. The two narrators have strong voices (different ones from each other), and the female narrator, Anne, seemed strong and sensible. In a setup reminiscent of Wilhelmina in London , she is the daughter of a long-deceased mother and a vague father who dies, leaving mostly debts, so she must make her own way in the world. Her way of doing so is to turn amateur detective, having come across a clue to a mystery but being unable to make the police take her seriously. This sends her off on a boat to South Africa, and on the boat she meets various people: a kind older woman, the other narrator (an MP), the MP's two secretaries, a clergyman/missionary, and Colonel Race, who's rumoured to work for the Secret Service.

We know from the prologue that there's a sinister mastermind called "the Colonel," who doesn't usually get his hands dirty, but gives criminal tasks to other people to do (fairly standard stuff, see, for example, Kate Plus Ten by Edgar Wallace). A wrinkle with this mastermind, though, is that he also always finds someone to frame for the crime. A supposedly Russian dancer who isn't actually Russian was one of his catspaws, and she has evidence of one of the frame-ups, and is planning to extort the Colonel.

Well, it's obvious what happens next. And thus kicks off the mystery, which Anne has stumbled into by happening to be in the right place at the right time - but she then takes action, which, while headstrong, isn't completely stupid.

What is completely stupid is that she gets decoyed into danger not once, but twice, with the same simple trick (like that idiot in Inspector French and the Cheyne Mystery ). She does bravely go deliberately into danger again by pretending to fall for it a third time (though the text says it's the second time, it's the third), after (view spoiler).

The identity of "the Colonel" was a complete surprise to me, and something of a cheat. (view spoiler)

So it's a mixed bag. On the one hand, Anne has an appealing voice and takes action as a protagonist. On the other hand, she makes some outstandingly stupid choices, has to be rescued not just by her love interest but by the author's heavy Hand of Fate, is the kind of female protagonist that all the men want, falls in love with someone she's barely met, and gives a speech about how women want to be dominated by men. On balance, it's... not great, with a lot of wasted potential. I'm dropping it down to three stars - not a recommendation - although it was teetering on the border of slipping into the lowest tier of my annual recommendation list.

This is an early Christie, and early Christie was not that great. It's a lesson to all of us that even the most admired authors usually wrote a few stinkers, or at least books that weren't even close to their later standards, at the start of their careers.

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Thursday, 24 July 2025

Review: The Clue of the Twisted Candle

The Clue of the Twisted Candle The Clue of the Twisted Candle by Edgar Wallace
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A writer of clever mysteries is manipulated by someone he believes to be a friend into shooting another man dead accidentally. His wealthy, influential "friend" has done this because he once wanted the woman who is now the writer's wife, and she turned him down.

The writer's actual friend, a Scotland Yard assistant commissioner, tries to prove his innocence. But later, the false friend is murdered in what appears to be a locked room...

A strong classic mystery from Edgar Wallace. Sure, I guessed a couple of the twists, though not how the locked-room murder was achieved. The villain isn't a cheap, cartoonish stock villain; he's well characterized, and believably and thoroughly villainous. (Though to make him so thoroughly awful, Wallace has to make him not English.)

The romance is a bit thin, as they often are in Edgar Wallace, and the love interest is far too young for the detective, but she is resourceful and brave and intelligent, so there's that.

It's been eccentrically edited by someone who thinks that an exclamation mark is a good thing to end a question with, rather than a question mark, and does this constantly. They were also weak on commas after subordinate clauses. I'm blaming an unknown editor, because Wallace himself reputedly rarely did any editing on his books, and I've not seen these quirks in other books of his I've read either.

Wallace's books are all thriller, no filler, and there's plenty to keep you glued to the page.

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Wednesday, 23 July 2025

Review: The Fire Within

The Fire Within The Fire Within by Patricia Wentworth
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I picked this up under the impression that it was a classic mystery. And at first, it seemed like it would be.

Old Edward is rather a nasty old man who is dying of (probably - it's never said outright) cancer. He has little other than contempt for his brother's son, also named Edward; he much prefers Edward's childhood companion David, now Old Edward's doctor. His wards are sisters Mary and Elizabeth. Mary is recently married to Edward, but David has never got over being in love with her. Elizabeth is in love with David, but it's unrequited; her friend Agneta's brother Louis nurses a similarly unrequited love for Elizabeth. There's also another woman, the widow of the doctor whose practice David took over, who has her eye on David as well.

David, out of principle, refuses to let Old Edward leave him any legacy, so it's mostly willed to the younger Edward, with some provision for Elizabeth.

And then David is called because Old Edward has taken a turn, and is close to death. The old man tells him, "I was fine until I drank from that cup. Edward brought it to me." David tests the dregs in Old Edward's home chemistry lab; there's a huge dose of arsenic.

And then Mary asks him, for her sake, because he once said he'd do anything for her, to just sign the death certificate so there won't be an inquest. Against everything he believes in, and believing that he's becoming an accessory to murder in so doing, he does so, unable to resist his appeal - and it breaks him.

Spoiler tags from here on. (view spoiler)

The passages dealing with Elizabeth's mystical consciousness reminded me very much of Charles Williams. And after setting everything up for potential tragedy, even an actual murder, the author pulls off what I call the Glorious Ending, where someone acts so much out of love that it completely transforms the outcome.

The author's prose, without being showy or complicated, is expressive and intelligent. There are a lot of (unattributed) poetry quotations at the heads of chapters; I think many of them may be Tennyson, who was the favourite poet of the author's later detective character Miss Silver, but I don't know Tennyson well enough to be certain.

The human relationships are a good deal deeper than you get in a standard classic mystery, because they're the focus of the story. It's definitely a novel, properly so called, and in its way it's a romance, though it's an unusual one. It's not my usual reading, but I enjoyed it considerably, and was gripped by it to the extent that, reading it on the train, I had some difficulty staying aware of which stations we were passing through so I could get off at the right time.

I'll definitely be looking for more from this author. Happily, she's remained popular enough that I can get a lot of her books, mainly the Miss Silver series, from the library.

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Tuesday, 22 July 2025

Review: The Case with Nine Solutions

The Case with Nine Solutions The Case with Nine Solutions by J.J. Connington
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A twisty piece of writing, in which once again Chief Constable Sir Clinton Driffield keeps proving that he's smarter than his slightly Watsonesque inspector, and, eventually, that he's smarter than the criminal.

There are no fewer than four deaths, three of them on the same night. The "nine solutions" refers to Driffield's table of possibilities for two of the deaths: all possible combinations of accident, suicide, and murder, which gets the inspector thinking.

The setup involves a complex set of relationships among workers at a scientific research institute, centering around a married couple whose marriage is not in good shape. There are three men and three women involved in a complicated relationship diagram; to say more would be a spoiler.

I didn't spot the criminal until very late, when even the inspector had worked it out. The reconstruction of the crime is typically clever. And yet, the ending - though involving a literally explosive climax - ended up being a letdown for me, as we're led to think something and then it turns out differently.

It's an odd mixture, in that the plot is obviously driven by powerful emotions, but the investigation is very matter-of-fact, and so is the attitude of the criminal when eventually confronted. Perhaps this is why I felt something was a bit off about it, and I enjoyed it less than I might have.

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Monday, 21 July 2025

Review: The Dark Eyes of London

The Dark Eyes of London The Dark Eyes of London by Edgar Wallace
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Another classic mystery from Edgar Wallace, and like all of the others I've read, not written to an obvious formula, even though he wrote so quickly.

This one involves a gang of blind men (the "Dark Eyes" of the title). There is a lot of imposture, identity concealment, suspense, and even romance, which is more fully developed than a lot of Wallace's romances, in that the couple at least spend a significant amount of time together.

However, it was the romance that gave me the element that I disliked about the book. It's between the Scotland Yard inspector and his secretary, who he admires not only because she's good-looking (though she is) but because she's intelligent and capable and, he thinks, a better detective than he is. But when he finally proposes, he doesn't like the idea of her working; he wants her to stay home and look after his flat, which is already perfectly well looked after by his manservant and cook. (Yes, a Scotland Yard inspector in the 1920s apparently made enough to have two servants.) I know, attitudes were different then, but usually Wallace doesn't just buy into the zeitgeist in this way. And it's not as if men of that generation never thought women should work or develop their natural gifts. World War I had accelerated a trend of opening up new options for women that had been around since before Victoria, and World War II was soon to accelerate it again.

Apart from that, it's a clever and thrilling mystery with hairsbreadth escapes (sometimes through intelligent preparation), kidnapping, conspiracy and fraud as well as murder, and plenty of period setting to enjoy. Sure, the same few cast members keep on coincidentally meeting, but I should probably give up complaining about that, because it seems everyone managed their plots that way a hundred years ago.

Even with the woman's-place-is-in-the-home foolishness, it's still a solid piece of work.

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Friday, 18 July 2025

Review: The Astonishing Adventure of Jane Smith

The Astonishing Adventure of Jane Smith The Astonishing Adventure of Jane Smith by Patricia Wentworth
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A terrific thriller from a century ago.

Jane Smith is exactly the kind of determined, brave, sensible, intelligent young woman I particularly like to see as a protagonist. Several of her more foolish fellow characters dislike her, because she isn't attempting to conceal that she's not suffering them gladly, but I thought she was wonderful.

She's not a stoic, though, and in fact she's a very believable young woman not long out of school. She gets frightened, a lot, and cries on multiple occasions. But she has good reason for both reactions, and, crucially, she doesn't let how she feels stop her from doing what she thinks is right.

The biggest flaw of the book is that Jane keeps being coincidentally in the exact right place at the exact right time for the plot to progress. She overhears conversations, sees people enter secret passages, finds a letter that, if she hadn't found it, would have caused a lot of trouble, not least for her, and of course stumbles and accidentally finds the hidden switch that opens one of those secret passages, with which this novel's setting abounds.

But she is at least looking for the switch when that happens, and, despite all of this helpful-to-the-plot coincidence, she does protagonize, and nothing falls into her lap; she has to be very brave and clever to thwart the evil conspiracy.

That conspiracy is a vaguely defined anarchist/socialist/communist/bolshevist thing, something to do with organized labour, but super radical, in that everyone who's not part of it is to be eliminated all around the world, using some mysterious (presumably chemical-warfare-related) formula which has been stolen from a government lab. My grandfather and great-grandfather were Red Federationalists at around this same time, but I'm reasonably confident that they didn't plot the overthrow of civilization and the deaths of millions. This seems to have been a middle-class bogeyman at the time, along with the "Yellow Peril," and about as real.

Still, I can set that aside for the sake of the story, which is gripping, and delivered in excellent but prose that, however, doesn't draw attention to itself. Unusually, the point of view is omniscient - sometimes switching between different characters' perceptions in the same scene - and the narrator even says "I suppose that..." at one point. It isn't obtrusive, as omniscient narration can easily be, and is mostly indistinguishable from the more usual third-person limited.

There are scenes in which the characters struggle, and look as if they'll succeed, but are thwarted, and then have to try something else, and this goes back and forth a few times, which is great for sustained tension. Jane rescues the Scotland Yard man who's in love with her at one point. We get a long thread in which someone seems one way and we eventually discover otherwise. The main villain is creepy and obsessive and believable. All the main characters have depth and dimension; they're not just their archetype and their plot role and one or two minor tags to distinguish them, they have a complex inner life, things they're striving for and that they fear, a push and pull of wanting something and also not wanting it, abilities that aren't just there for the plot.

It's a fine piece of work, apart from the coincidences and the bogeyman, and sits comfortably in the Gold tier of my annual recommendation list. I'll be looking for more from this author.

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Wednesday, 16 July 2025

Review: The Mystery of the Blue Train

The Mystery of the Blue Train The Mystery of the Blue Train by Agatha Christie
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Apart from the fact that multiple characters cross paths multiple times by complete coincidence, which is a device used by better writers than Christie to keep their casts tight, there's not much to carp at in the execution of this one. (Though she does use that device constantly, until they're acquainted and she doesn't need to.)

This is a clever Poirot mystery. I thought, about halfway through, that I had figured out who the murderer was (I thought it was (view spoiler)), but I was completely wrong and didn't suspect the actual culprits even for a moment. And yet, I think it would qualify as a "fair-play" mystery; the clues were all there, nothing was known only to the detective.

The journey was enjoyable, Poirot was his classic self, Hastings was mercifully absent, and all in all Christie is hitting her stride with this one.

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Monday, 14 July 2025

Review: The Brand Of Silence: A Detective Story

The Brand Of Silence: A Detective Story The Brand Of Silence: A Detective Story by Johnston Mcculley
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Another rip-roaring pulp adventure from McCulley.

He's re-using his material a bit. The wealthy man gains his valet the same way the wealthy man in The Black Star gets his valet: he finds him about to commit suicide by jumping into a river, talks him out of it, and gains his gratitude and loyalty for life. This seems a slightly unconventional way of getting a valet (I believe it was more common to go to an agency), and it's weird that it happened twice. Anyway, "Murk," as he names the valet (who, implausibly, has used so many false names he's forgotten his real one), is "solid" for his boss from then on. So is his boss's old friend, a detective, who values friendship and loyalty more than money. Both of them refuse to be intimidated or bribed into working against, or ceasing to work for, the hero.

And he needs loyal friends, because he's come back to New York from ten years in Honduras, where he turned $10,000 into a million, to find that he's mysteriously shunned by society; a bank manager doesn't want his business, he's asked to leave the first hotel he books into, young women he hardly knows cut him dead, and, when forced to talk to him, say "You know what you did!" But he doesn't.

And then he gets arrested for murder, and the people who can prove his alibi swear they never saw him at the time.

It's a fine mystery, and it took me until 70% of the way through to figure out what was going on and who was behind it. (view spoiler) Meanwhile, there's lots of detective work and plenty of being ambushed and hit on the head and abducted. It's hard-boiled on the outside and noblebright on the inside; both Murk and the detective maintain their loyalty, and the hero is a good man wrongly accused.

If you're going to write pulp fiction, this is how to do it.

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Thursday, 10 July 2025

Review: In the Fog

In the Fog In the Fog by Richard Harding Davis
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is clever, and unfortunately the reason that it's clever is a total spoiler.

In a club so exclusive that members don't even mention they belong to it because that would sound boastful, several members are sitting late at night. One is an opponent of a bill in parliament which one of the others, if he speaks to it, will probably get passed. This particular MP has a vice: he loves detective stories, and can't bear to put them down.

One of the other members then starts telling a detective story. Lost in a recent London fog, he stumbled into a house - he's not sure where - and found two people murdered.

It turns out that others of the members also have stories to contribute relating to this murder or the people involved, and the story-telling goes on long into the night...

It's well written, the journey is enjoyable, and the conclusion includes multiple twists, one after another.

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Wednesday, 9 July 2025

Review: City of Serpents: The Secrets of Ormdale, Book 4

City of Serpents: The Secrets of Ormdale, Book 4 City of Serpents: The Secrets of Ormdale, Book 4 by Christina Baehr
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

These books make me feel things - amusement, mostly, but also sadness and tension in sympathy with the plight of various characters - and that boosts their rating in my personal system. The main character and narrator, Edith, is a delight - principled without being pompous about it, brave, clever, and showing a delightful humility, and a willingness to work with others rather than go it alone, that I wish more protagonists had.

It does have a few minor flaws. Because I listened to the audiobook, I can't comment on the copy editing, except for a couple of language issues that came through even in audio format. Firstly, Edith (or rather the author) sometimes says "lay" where an actual speaker of Edith's dialect would use "lie," and secondly there's an instance of the "she glimpsed at me" error I've seen a few times. It should be either "glimpsed" or "glanced at," depending on whether the subject is doing it deliberately or not. Both imply momentary seeing, but "glimpsed" means something like "happened to see momentarily because of already looking in a particular direction"; it implies passive observation, whereas "glanced at" implies that the subject was directing their gaze, which is why it gets the "at" preposition and "glimpsed" doesn't. There are occasional minor Americanisms, too.

The plot doesn't completely rely on coincidence, but coincidence does help it along now and again and keep the cast tight and densely connected.

The various dragon-keeping families have several times now mentioned lighting beacons to signal each other for aid, but it's unclear how that would work, given that beacons are a line-of-sight signal and someone in between would have to pick up the signal and pass it on (the distances are great enough that line-of-sight doesn't apply).

My other question was, did young women routinely carry walking sticks in 1899? Young men certainly did, but I don't think healthy young women did, so arming themselves in this way would have been rather obvious.

None of this was even close to being fatal for my enjoyment of Edith's voice and her actions, and this largely real-feeling version of England (mainly London) at the end of the 19th century. The author reads extensively in literature of the period, and it shows. A lot of people who set their books in earlier time periods fail to give them any sense of authenticity, and I think it's partly because they've either never read or at least never really thought about anything written at the time. Edith is of her time while being fully relatable to a present-day reader, and it's an admirable feat of craft that makes her that way.

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Monday, 7 July 2025

Review: The Big Four

The Big Four The Big Four by Agatha Christie
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A departure for the Poirot series, in that it's more in the vein of Edgar Wallace or Fu Manchu (complete with mysterious, sinister Chinese mastermind) than the classic Poirot setting of a country-house murder mystery. It's what's sometimes called a "fix-up," a number of short stories reworked into a novel, and that gives it an episodic feel, connected by an overarching set of adversaries; this means that the plot doesn't follow the usual rising action, climax, falling action shape as much as something planned as a novel from the start.

Hastings has been ranching in the Argentine with his wife "Cinderella" for a year and a half, and has come back to England for a planned couple of months on what is implied to be urgent business, but this is instantly dropped and not mentioned again when he connects back up with Poirot. He then spends nearly a year helping his old friend battle against the sinister conspiracy of the Big Four: the aforementioned Chinese mastermind, an American multi-millionaire, a French mad scientist, and a master of disguise and ruthless assassin. These four are attempting to destabilize the world in such a way that they can end up as dictators of it; they are behind various current revolutionary movements and labour troubles (because, of course, the idea that people who have genuine grievances with bad government and predatory management would organize themselves to oppose them is patently absurd).

I suspect that Hastings' ranch probably had its best year ever while he wasn't there mismanaging it, but that's just my prejudice. He continues to be remarkably dense, and resentful of this being pointed out, while Poirot continues to be intensely self-admiring and to come to correct conclusions on inadequate evidence. Poirot is forced to deceive not just his enemies, but his chief ally, because Hastings is too honest and would give the game away otherwise. Fortunately, he's trivially easy to deceive.

Part of Poirot's characterization here, which hasn't been as prominent previously, is that he never gets an English idiom or proverb quite correct, making him more of a "funny foreigner". The Chinese characters are mysterious and sinister. At times, the book approaches parody - of the suspense genre, of Sherlock Holmes (with the disguises and the (view spoiler)), and of Poirot and Hastings themselves. The conclusion is a classic over-the-top trope.

Hastings makes a couple of classic sexist and racist remarks (of the French scientist, who is a woman, that he would have thought that a male brain was required to do what she does; later, that he has never been able to tell "Chinamen" apart), but I view these as the author's characterization of Hastings as a particular kind of English idiot, not as her own prejudices. The idea that a sinister conspiracy was behind various current political problems... I'm unsure whether she believed that, as many people of her background did at the time, or just used the trope fictionally.

Where the author does definitely fall down is in a few mechanical issues. She dangles a modifier, comma-splices two sentences, and frequently - her abiding fault - doesn't end a question with a question mark, also in a couple of places ending sentences which aren't questions with question marks.

But does the book work as what it is, despite what it is not being in the usual vein? I think it does, even though its author called it "that rotten book". There were plenty of worse thriller/suspense novels written in the period. Part of the book's sales success was down to the publicity around Christie's still-unexplained disappearance and reappearance shortly before its publication, but I think it stands up against its contemporaries in the genre. It's not a great Poirot book - it's not a great book of any kind - but I found it enjoyable in its own terms.

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Review: The Glass Slide World

The Glass Slide World The Glass Slide World by Carrie Vaughn
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Competent, rather than thrilling. That's even true of the interpolated excerpts from the pulp fictionalization of the main character's two fathers; it's both more competent and less thrilling than real pulp fiction of the era. I think the lack of thrillingness, despite pirates and conspiracies and spies and disease outbreaks and the threat of a selfish person causing World War I to break out early because of an obsession with wealth, is down largely to three things.

Firstly, the main character, Ava, is not obviously emotional about any of it. Now, I yield to nobody in my liking for a level-headed, sensible, pragmatic female character rather than an emotional mess, but they should still obviously feel something, and I never got much of an emotional sense off Ava. I'm not sure if that's the character or the narration style, which is matter-of-fact throughout.

Secondly, there's no real driving plot question. (Some spoilers in this paragraph for a not-very-exciting plot; you really won't lose much tension by reading them.) (view spoiler)

Thirdly, the magic system is super loose and non-Sandersonian. The premise is that naturalists, by understanding nature, gain the ability to access powers that the creatures they study have, but a lot of it seems to be dependent on imagination, and while Ava insists that it's science (though not an exact science) and that it's not magic, it's totally magic. Her particular area of study is small and microscopic organisms, so her family think it's lacking in power, but it's really not.

Some of it is pretty dubious, too. At one point, needing a way to sterilize things in a field hospital, Ava turns water into alcohol using the power of yeast. Except yeast can't turn plain water into alcohol; alcohol has carbon atoms in it, and you need a source for those. Ava also learns to scry using bacteria, which are everywhere, and even has a vision of the future, feebly justified by the chain of life stretching through time as well as space.

The magic can do pretty much anything, and we don't know in advance what its limitations are, so it can be used to overcome any plot difficulty. Which is why Sanderson's First Law ("An author's ability to solve conflict with magic is DIRECTLY PROPORTIONAL to how well the reader understands said magic") is so important. The stakes never feel very high, because we're never convinced that Ava is going to fail; she'll just pull a solution almost literally out of the air - plus she's not setting out to solve an overarching problem, she's just dealing with what's in front of her. Perhaps the next book, where she tries to prevent World War I, will solve the second problem if not the first.

But the book is, at least mechanically, very competent, like its heroine. I only noticed three sentences where there were missing or misplaced words in the pre-publication version I got from Netgalley for review, and the punctuation is impeccable.

The setting in 1902 feels authentic; it's not just scenery flats with some 21st-century people in cosplay performing in front of them. Sure, Ava's parents are what's now called a throuple, but it isn't like such arrangements didn't exist in the period. The poet Sir Henry Newbolt (1862-1938), author of 'Drake's Drum,' had a well-documented and long-standing polyamorous relationship with his wife and her cousin, for example, though as at time of writing his Wikipedia article doesn't mention it. The comparative openness of Ava's parents' arrangement - which seems to have been reached in the first book, which I haven't read - is perhaps slightly anachronistic, but given that one of her fathers is of African descent, anyone who's going to be shocked already is, so why obsess about hiding it?

Still, if this book was a contestant on American Idol around the mid-20-teens, Randy Jackson would describe it as "just OK for me, dogg," while Harry Connick Jr would say it was "all chops and no gravy". It's... fine. The competence would normally get it a Silver rating in my annual Best of the Year list, but I just didn't find it that exciting, mainly for reasons of craft that I've outlined above. An experienced author like Carrie Vaughn, who has written thrilling urban fantasy and supers books, can definitely do better than this.

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Wednesday, 2 July 2025

Review: The Crimson Cryptogram

The Crimson Cryptogram The Crimson Cryptogram by Fergus W. Hume
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

While there's plenty of detective work going on from the amateur detectives here (the police are hardly involved and dismissed out of hand as incompetent), it doesn't ultimately lead to the solution to the mystery. That comes through a combination of fortunate coincidence (discovering a key piece of evidence by total chance) and the confession of the criminal, which weakens the ending and makes it a disappointment to me.

Where it is stronger is in everything leading up to the end. The protagonist is a doctor, just trying to establish himself in his first practice, and he's assisted by his flatmate, a reporter. The doctor falls in love with the widow ((view spoiler)) of the murdered man and wants to help her. Because he doesn't have many patients yet, he's able to take the time to do so, which is an improvement on the usual "superhero job" phenomenon, where an amateur detective theoretically has a job, but in practice spends all their time solving the mystery.

The relationship between the doctor and the woman is developed over time, rather than being the usual instant thin romance, so points for that. The doctor is brave, determined, clever, and works hard on the solution, not being afraid to confront the various ne'er-do-wells associated with the victim, who was a dissolute gambler and all-round no-goodnik. His cousin the weaselly lawyer is also well characterized. As a novel, it's pretty good. As a mystery, ultimately disappointing.

The cryptogram of the title is something the victim writes on his arm in his own blood; it's solved relatively easily, and ends up being a herring of unusually literal redness. Also, it would have been much easier to understand how the cryptogram worked if we had been given a diagram of the solution grid. It's unimportant, though, just a bit of colour (again, literally).

Taking the rough with the smooth, it's just barely a recommendation, in the lowest tier of my annual list. But it is a recommendation.

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Monday, 30 June 2025

Review: The Sleuth of St. James's Square

The Sleuth of St. James's Square The Sleuth of St. James's Square by Melville Davisson Post
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

A difficult collection to rate, because it has a combination of flaws (for me, predominating) and strengths.

The biggest flaw for a 21st-century audience is the author's evident disgust at the existence of Asian people. Though he's not a big fan of anyone who's not a well-off WASP, actually; anyone who's poor or foreign (or a villain, but that's often a subset of the other two categories) gets called a "creature" or, sometimes, a "human creature," and the implication is not a positive one.

This is the case even when the narrator is theoretically a diarist from the American colonial period; the voice is always the same, even though we have multiple (theoretical) narrators in the various stories, often first-person but sometimes third-person. The sleuth of the title provides a common thread, but often quite a slender one, and rarely does any sleuthing. A good many of the stories are recounted to him, or by him, about crimes that were committed somewhere else or even in a different time, and in the investigation of which he had no involvement. In one story, the only connection to him is that he's briefly mentioned as having given directions to the person who's informing the central character of the circumstances of her father's death. This doesn't help to develop him as a character, and I didn't feel like I knew him at all by the end, because I'd hardly seen him do anything, and most of what he said was reading out the writings of other people.

Not all of the stories are mystery stories as such, either, though most have a twist at the end which changes the reader's perspective on the preceding events. The twists are often quite clever, though of course some are weaker than others.

The Gutenberg edition has quite a few uncorrected scan errors. I'll send them in at some stage as errata.

Overall, a miss for me, and I don't see quite where the enthusiasm for the author from his contemporaries came from. It doesn't quite make it to my 2025 recommendation list, even in the lowest tier.

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Thursday, 26 June 2025

Review: Make Mine Homogenized

Make Mine Homogenized Make Mine Homogenized by Rick Raphael
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Farm animals near a nuclear test site in Nevada start producing milk and eggs with ridiculously impossible properties.

It's as silly as it sounds, and poorly edited; there are missing commas around terms of address, commas between adjectives that don't require them, commas before the main verb, and a number of misspellings, including "yoke" for "yolk".

I found it very mildly amusing.

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Review: The Black Star A Detective Story

The Black Star A Detective Story The Black Star A Detective Story by Johnston McCulley
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A rip-roaring pulp adventure. A wealthy young man with a penchant for action goes up against a brilliant criminal mastermind, the Black Star of the title, who keeps his organization so compartmentalized that nobody can betray him or each other, and plans so meticulously that he always gets away with his crimes.

There are, of course, some pulp cliches. The button that opens a trapdoor in the floor and drops the person standing in front of the desk through it into a pit. The accidental discovery of a secret compartment/door/drawer (as seen in Princess Bride, among many other places). The loyal lower-class sidekick, in this case a reformed criminal who the wealthy young man rescued from self-destruction. The love interest who plays very little role and has very little character development; she's just there because a young man like this would be expected to have one. The fat, ineffectual chief of police, of an American city that's never named; it might well be New York, since it has a river and wealthy socialites, some of whom have Dutch names, but then again, it might not.

But there are also plenty of chases, escapes, captures, pitched battles (in which surprisingly few people are even badly injured, despite the habit of the police of firing their revolvers wildly, in part because the criminals use knockout gas guns and have a code against murder), bragging letters from the criminal announcing his triumph over the police and his nemesis and celebrating his own cleverness, and the inevitable downfall of this hubristic character when his opponent proves too clever for him at last. For a while, there's a police detective character, but he drops out of sight towards the end, having acted mostly as a sounding board for the hero.

Zestful and suspenseful, it's everything you would expect from a classic pulp adventure by the creator of Zorro, and I'll certainly read the sequel at some point.

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Tuesday, 24 June 2025

Review: Castle of the Winds: The Secrets of Ormdale, Book 3

Castle of the Winds: The Secrets of Ormdale, Book 3 Castle of the Winds: The Secrets of Ormdale, Book 3 by Christina Baehr
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I found this by turns amusing and moving, and also very soundly crafted. Most books by 21st-century authors set in England in an earlier era feel like the characters are 21st-century people in costumes, standing in front of scenery flats. These books give me the feeling of actual inhabitants of a real England in 1899, probably helped by listening to the audiobook, which is beautifully read by an English woman.

I was thoroughly amused by the anti-romance (a genre perfected by P.G. Wodehouse), where narrator Edith is trying not to be attractive to the Welsh prince, especially since, by basically being Edith, she is significantly failing to be unattractive and uninteresting. Her rival Meredith is a waspish, conventional, pretty young woman, and Edith's distant cousin/escort/possible love interest Simon sees through Meredith immediately and is not attracted, any more than Edith is to the beautiful Welsh prince. I do love a romance plot where people behave sensibly, and Edith is (nearly) always sensible. And I particularly like the subversion of the toxic romance trope of falling in love with one's captor.

It's interesting how Edith is simultaneously put off by the prince's tendency to order people around and assume that she'll fall in with his wishes without consulting her, and frustrated by Simon not being more self-assertive. But when he does assert himself, she disastrously refuses to follow his plan. She wants something in the middle: a man who is complete in himself and doesn't need to be managed, but doesn't try to manage her either, and who will consult her as an equal - yet she doesn't treat Simon as an equal in that circumstance either, but patronizes him, rationalizing that she has more experience of the world than he does. She has room to grow, in other words, which is a good thing for a character - and she realizes it, too.

In contrast to the previous book in particular, this one has more intrepid action, though a lot of it is Edith (mostly) sensibly figuring out her next move in a situation of threat - something that I still found just as engaging as the action parts, to be clear.

Edith's moral and philosophical position is always strong and clear, without any preaching happening, and she backs it up with principled action. Nor does she think she has all the answers, or that her milieu is perfect, or that her opponents' setup is without merit, all of which is refreshing in itself.

In short, it has everything I miss in all too many fantasy works coming out today: good craft, authentic historical feel, attention to detail, a character who has the humility to acknowledge her imperfections and weaknesses and the strength to work on them, sensible decisions made out of clearly articulated principle that's believable for the time period without being jarring for today, and a depth of knowledge and understanding of how humans are, conveyed without soapboxing. I thoroughly enjoyed it.

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Monday, 23 June 2025

Review: Tom Swift and His Submarine Boat

Tom Swift and His Submarine Boat Tom Swift and His Submarine Boat by Victor Appleton
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

I didn't expect this to be good, but I probably expected it to be better than it was.

A plot driven largely by accident, luck, coincidence, poor planning, the malicious acts of dastardly rivals, and artificial urgency that somehow vanished when there was actually a reason to hurry. Add Brazilians who speak Spanish (unlike real Brazilians, who speak Portuguese), and it's just a whole mass of nonsense.

Here's how it goes down (there are spoilers, if you care). Tom Swift, boy inventor, is helping his father, the "aged" inventor Barton Swift (everyone who's much older than Tom is "aged"), to build a submarine. They intend to enter it for a Government prize of $50,000, but then Tom reads in a newspaper about the wreck of a ship carrying $150,000 worth of gold off the coast of South America. Nobody else can reach this gold, and it's not going anywhere, but for some non-obvious reason it immediately becomes urgent that they rush the sub's development and go and get the gold, abandoning the idea of trying out for the Government prize. Por que no los dos?

Through a Convenient Eavesdrop, Tom learns that another submarine developer who wants to compete for the prize is a bad lot (he's talking to himself aloud while changing a tyre, and Tom overhears by complete coincidence). Through what I suppose I must call an Inconvenient Eavesdrop - inconvenient for Tom, that is - this character learns of the shipwreck, again by complete coincidence, because Tom is blabbing about it to a friend of his, and of course he will also be able to go after it in his submarine.

There now actually is urgency, and they rush the sub into its first trial without preparing any of the emergency mechanisms that they end up needing when a quite predictable fault occurs in this previously untested machine. Tom ("our hero") does one of the few straightforwardly effectual, protagonistic things he does in the entire book and saves everyone.

They get the sub working properly and all the emergency mechanisms installed at last, and head off for South America. The urgency doesn't stop them from deciding to spend a day relaxing on a tropical island they happen to encounter, where their rival also turns up, having unaccountably followed them (sonar doesn't seem to be a thing, and they were underwater most of the time).

They manage to shake off the pursuers, do an emergency surfacing after another system goes wrong (health and safety is not much of a thing either), and find themselves next to a Brazilian warship. The uncivilized Spanish-speaking Brazilians arrest them as saboteurs and are going to shoot them, but by fortunate coincidence a storm blows up and distracts the slipshod Brazilian navy crew enough that the brave Americans can escape. There's a completely uncalled-for dig at the fact that the Brazilians are brown-skinned.

They cruise to the location of the wreck and, after a bit of searching, find it and carry off the gold without a hitch, exiting just as their rivals come on the scene.

I've left out the subplot about Tom's bully, the spoiled son of a wealthy banker, getting his comeuppance (again) in a rather immature prank-for-prank exchange.

The other notable feature for me was that two of the characters had verbal tics, but Tom wasn't one of them - he didn't say or do things adverbially, which disappointed me, because I love a Tom Swifty. Perhaps this only developed later in the series. One of the tics I found amusing: a character who, in practically every sentence, blesses some part of his body or one of his possessions ("bless my boots!"), often in a way that connects to whatever is going on. The other I found annoying: the captain they recruit to help them with the submarine, again almost every time he says something, tacks on a phrase like "if you'll forgive the observation" or "if my saying so doesn't offend you," even when he has expressed the blandest and most obvious opinion. The tics are at least 50% of the characterization of these two men.

Probably OK if you're 12, not very knowledgeable, and have no problem with American exceptionalism. But for me, disappointing.

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Review: The Clue of the New Pin

The Clue of the New Pin The Clue of the New Pin by Edgar Wallace
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

A clever locked-room mystery, though not so clever that I didn't guess something close to it. I completely did not guess the murderer, though. And for Edgar Wallace, the romance is fairly well developed, in the sense that the couple spend a good amount of time together both before and after getting engaged, and the woman isn't completely wet and passive.

In fact, it's a strong mystery thriller, with lots of action, but not so much that the protagonists (an unusually intelligent policeman and a newspaper reporter) don't get to reflect on events and on life in general. There's a Chinese man in it, and though an offensive epithet is used by a number of characters including the reporter, he has some depth to him and is not just a stereotype or a bunch of Orientalist tropes. (view spoiler)

It's solid work, enjoyable both as a mystery and as a novel.

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Review: The Daffodil Mystery

The Daffodil Mystery The Daffodil Mystery by Edgar Wallace
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Starts out strongly, establishing a thoroughly despicable man who will turn out to be the victim. But I found the ending a bit of a let-down; a lot of the mysterious features of the case turned out just to be coincidences that didn't mean anything.

Romance was not a Wallace strength, despite or perhaps because of the fact that he had an adventurous life in this regard, and this book includes what I call a "thin romance". A man who, based on his position in the police, is probably in about his mid-thirties and has never before even considered a romantic attachment, meets a woman who is probably no more than mid-twenties, based on the stated age of her mother (who is likely closer to the detective's age), and instantly falls in love with her; they spend very little time together, and she hides significant knowledge from him, and he knows that she's doing it. And this is what passes for a romance.

Still, the journey was twisty and enjoyable, even if where we ended up was a bit weak.

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Tuesday, 17 June 2025

Review: The Murder of Roger Ackroyd

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Significantly better than the previous novel in the series ( The Murder on the Links ), and I'm not sure whether that's because of Hastings' absence or despite it.

What I mean is that Hastings was an actual impediment in Links, but here I felt Poirot was different without him, as if the Poirot-and-Hastings collaboration was itself almost a character. But Poirot finds a kind of substitute in the doctor who narrates this book, taking him with him while he investigates (like Hastings, and like the young doctors in Austin Freeman, he seems to have a lot of leisure time despite theoretically having a job), and bouncing ideas off him. Poirot remains, as always, inscrutable about his conclusions from the various clues, until the traditional gathering of the suspects for the dramatic reveal.

And it is dramatic. The twist in this particular book is famous, and I did know about it in advance, but even so, I found it hard to spot the clues. It all comes down to timing, like so many mystery stories.

The process, the incidental human stories that get revealed (as usual in this sort of cosy mystery, everyone has some sort of secret; Poirot explicitly says to a group of the suspects that he knows each of them is hiding something), and the clever solution are all at a high standard by classic mystery measures. The doctor's sister alone is worth the price of admission: the centre of the village gossip network, she's better than a newspaper at gathering, generating and disseminating rumour and speculation, which varies from highly accurate to highly inaccurate, but which she always delivers with the same level of confidence. The romance subplots are a little weak, particularly without Hastings and his susceptibility to redheads, and the police's main suspect is offstage for almost the entire novel and a near-nonentity once he does appear, but it still lands right at the top of the Silver tier of my annual recommendation list.

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