20260124

Murder After Christmas by Rupert Latimer

Serving up mystery, mince pies and merriment


Murder After Christmas is a treat for cosy crime fans
Murder After Christmas is a
treat for cosy crime fans
This Christmas-themed whodunit was out of print for 75 years, meaning cosy crime fans have been missing a festive treat all that time.

First published in 1944, the little-known detective novel Murder After Christmas by Rupert Latimer has finally been made available to today’s readers by being published in the British Library Crime Classics series, and I found it an enjoyable read in the cold days after Christmas this year.

A family invite their rich old uncle to stay at their country house because, they joke, Mussolini had made it impossible for him to visit his Italian villa at Christmas as usual. He has written to them saying that his hotel in London has also been commandeered because of the war.

There are humorous remarks made about murdering the old man for his money by some members of the household before his arrival and therefore it is not much of a surprise for the reader when ‘good old Uncle Willie’, is found dead in the snow on Boxing Day dressed as Santa Claus.

His hosts, the Redpath family, appear to be kind-hearted people who had said before his arrival that they would like to give the 90-year old a good time over Christmas so that he might remember them in his will.

Other distant relatives also take an interest in Uncle Willie and visit him at the Redpath’s house in the run up to Christmas and send him parcels. Uncle Willie is known to have a sweet tooth and he enjoys lots of mince pies and chocolates before Christmas.

After his body is found, the police suspect he has been poisoned and because he is found dead during a Christmas party there are plenty of suspects for Superintendent Culley to choose from as he carries out a complex and thorough murder investigation.

Rupert Latimer tells the story in a light-hearted way, putting in plenty of seasonal touches. Only one set of footprints in the snow lead to the body. Two people are dressed as Santa Claus at the Boxing Day party to add to the confusion. And why are a stash of mince pies found sewn up inside the seat of a chair in the old man’s bedroom?

Latimer was born at Wildernesse Park in Kent,  the home of his grandmother, Lady Hillingdon
Latimer was born at Wildernesse Park in Kent, 
the home of his grandmother, Lady Hillingdon
 
Unusually, the Redpaths helpfully invite Superintendent Culley to stay with them in the dead man’s room to see if he can take suspicion away from them by solving the mystery.

Rupert Latimer was the pen name of Algernon Vernon Mills, who was born in 1905 at Wildernesse Park in Kent, the home of his grandmother, the Dowager Lady Hillingdon. 

Despite his privileged background, he had an unfortunate experience as a child during a holiday in France. After eating some strawberries growing wild, he contracted typhoid fever.

His elder sister and their nurse both died, but although he survived, he was lame afterwards and suffered from epilepsy.

As a young man, he pursued a career on the stage, working in repertory, where he met the playwright Arnold Ridley, who later became famous for his part in Dad’s Army.

Latimer also wrote some humorous novels and the detective story Death in Real Life, but then his health declined and he was diagnosed with a brain tumour and died in 1953.

It was to take until 2022 for Murder After Christmas to be reissued by British Library Crime Classics. I found it to be entertaining and well written with a satisfying ending and it was a good distraction from my own left over mince pies!

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20250907

Come Away Death by Gladys Mitchell

 

Trip to Greek temple is both eventful and educational

Come Away, Death is one of Mitchell's more bizarre mysteries
Come Away, Death is one of
Mitchell's more bizarre mysteries
In what I found to be the most bizarre detective novel by Gladys Mitchell I have read so far, Mrs Bradley goes on a strange tour of Greece led by an amateur archaeologist, who is the husband of one of her friends, Marie Hopkinson.

Sir Rudri Hopkinson, who is regarded by many people as eccentric, but is suspected of being deranged by others, takes his children and some of their friends, a rival scholar, a photographer to record events, and psychoanalyst Mrs Beatrice Lestrange Bradley, to the Temple of Eleusis to try to recreate ancient rituals as closely as possible in the hope of summoning the goddess Demeter.

Some strange events occur during the journey and, after one of the group disappears, and a severed head turns up in a box of snakes, Mrs Bradley decides she needs to investigate what is going on.

In her eighth novel to feature the psychoanalyst and amateur detective Mrs Bradley, Gladys Mitchell breaks with convention by letting the inevitable murder occur a long way into the story, which was unusual at the time the novel was written.

Mrs Bradley makes friends with some small boys who are in the party and enlists their help with her sleuthing. She once again shows herself to be at ease with young people, perhaps reflecting qualities possessed by Gladys Mitchell, who was a teacher for many years.

One of the boys had been quick to point out to her at the start of the expedition that the number of travellers in Sir Rudri’s tour group was an unlucky thirteen, but Mrs Bradley says she is not superstitious.

Gladys Mitchell took her title from the lyric of a song in Twelfth Night
Gladys Mitchell took her title from the
lyric of a song in Twelfth Night
And another member of the party, who claims to have the gift of seeing into the future, has said she could foresee death.

When the inevitable demise occurs, Mrs Bradley, who is herself highly educated, uses both her knowledge of Greek mythology and background in psychology to help her solve the case.

I found the way Gladys Mitchell tells the story, without losing my interest despite the many references to Greek mythology made along the way, is testimony to her talent as a writer.

The title of the 1937 mystery, Come Away, Death, was taken from a line in the lyric of a song in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night. One of the characters sings: 

'Come away, come away, death, and in sad cypress let me be laid; Fly away, Fly away, breath, I am slain by a fair cruel maid.'

It is interesting to note that Agatha Christie may have got the idea for the title of her 1940 Poirot novel, Sad Cypress, from the same song written by Shakespeare.

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20240619

A Happy 10th Anniversary to Death in the High City

Successful decade for Bergamo’s first British crime novel 


Death in the High City, the first detective novel written in English to be set in Bergamo in Lombardy, was published ten years ago this summer. 

The novel came out in Kindle format in May 2014 and a paperback version was released in July 2014.

It has since sold copies in the UK, Italy, Spain, France, the Netherlands, Germany, America, Australia, Canada, and Mexico. 

To mark the tenth anniversary, East Wind Publishing have issued a new edition of the mystery with a front cover showing Bergamo’s historic Via Colleoni at night. The street in the Città Alta, Bergamo’s upper town, features as a key location in the novel.

Referred to as un romanzo giallo in Italian, Death in the High City centres on the investigation into the death of an English woman who was staying in the Città Alta in Bergamo while working on a biography she was writing of the opera composer Gaetano Donizetti, who was born and died in the city. 

The novel was the first in a series to feature the characters of Kate Butler, a freelance journalist, and Steve Bartorelli, a retired Detective Chief Inspector, who is of partly Italian descent. 

The dead woman had been living in an apartment in Bergamo’s Città Alta and much of the action takes place within the walls of the upper town. At first the local police do not believe there is enough evidence to open a murder enquiry and so journalist Kate Butler, the victim’s cousin, arrives in Bergamo to try to get some answers about her relative’s death. 

Kate visits many of the places in Bergamo with Donizetti connections and her enquiries also take her to nearby Lago d’Iseo and into the countryside around San Pellegrino Terme. But after her own life is threatened and there has been another death in the Città Alta, her partner, Steve Bartorelli, joins her to help unravel the mystery and trap the killer.

The reader can enjoy Bergamo’s wonderful architecture and scenery from the comfort of their own armchair, while savouring the many descriptions in the novel of local food and wine. 

Author Val Culley has been delighted with the level of interest shown both at home and in Italy in what was her first novel.

She was invited to present Death in the High City to an audience in San Pellegrino Terme and sign copies of the book, as a guest at the fifth anniversary celebrations of Bergamo Su e Giù, a group of independent tour guides based in the city. During the evening, she was presented with a book about San Pellegrino Terme by the town’s mayor. 

Val has also made two appearances on Bergamo TV to talk about the novel with presenter Teo Mangione during his daily breakfast programme. During one of her visits to the studios, she presented a copy of the book to the Mayor of Bergamo, Giorgio Gori, who took office the year the novel was published. Val was invited to Bergamo for a further visit by the Cambridge Institute to give a talk about Death in The High City to a group of 80 Italian teachers of English and to sign copies for them. 

She has also formally presented a copy of Death in the High City to the Biblioteca Civica (Civic Library), a beautiful 16th century building in white marble, designed by Vincenzo Scamozzi, situated in Piazza Vecchia, a location that features frequently in the novel.

Val was later invited to give a talk about Death in the High City at a sixth form college in Zogno, a comune in Valle Brembana set in beautiful countryside in the hills above Bergamo. 

She has given talks about Death in the High City to members of the Dante Alighieri Society in Nottingham and members of Voglia d’Italia, a society for Italy enthusiasts in south Yorkshire. 

Another highlight was when the New York Times referred to Death in the High City in a travel feature about Bergamo. 

The book has been purchased by Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire Libraries for the benefit of their readers and is available for sale on both Amazon and Waterstones on line. The novel will interest readers who enjoy the ‘cosy’ crime fiction genre or like detective stories with an Italian setting.

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20240416

Dancers in Mourning by Margery Allingham

 

Readers see Campion at work when his emotions become involved

Campion is called in to investigate when the leading man in a hit West End musical becomes the victim of spiteful, practical jokes.

The actor and dancer Jimmy Sutane is starring in a show based on a best-selling book written by William Faraday, who is one of Campion’s oldest friends. Campion is taken to see the show by Faraday and introduced to Jimmy after the performance.

The star asks Campion to discreetly look into the pranks, which are beginning to cause him and his family distress, in this eighth novel by Margery Allingham to feature her mysterious, clever sleuth.

Campion goes with Faraday to stay at Sutane’s country home, where he meets the star’s family and some of his show business friends.

During Campion and Faraday’s visit, an unpopular actress is accidentally run over by Sutane in his own car. Everyone seems happy to believe that this was an accident, but Campion is not so sure.

As the increasingly unpleasant practical jokes continue, Sutane’s ambitious understudy is killed, along with several innocent bystanders. Campion liaises with the police about this unpleasant development while carrying on with his own investigation.  

When the butler in charge of the Sutane household resigns, Campion has to call on his own unconventional butler, valet, and bodyguard, Magersfontein Lugg, to help restore peace and order to the now chaotic country residence, while he continues to investigate the mystery. Lugg gets on well with the Sutane family, teaching the daughter of the house to pick locks.

In this novel, which was first published in 1937, Campion finds himself torn, wanting to uncover the facts, but trying to avoid upsetting a woman he has just met and fallen in love with. However, the determined detective sticks to his task and it is only at the end of the story that he finds out the truth.

This is another gripping novel from Margery Allingham, which slowly unveils Campion’s character, showing his human side. It draws the reader into Campion’s world and makes us want to find out more about him.

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20240218

Overture to Death by Ngaio Marsh

The story of a theatrical entertainment that starts with a bang


Ngaio Marsh was one of the four 'Queens of Crime' in detective fiction's Golden Age
Ngaio Marsh was one of the four 'Queens
of Crime' in detective fiction's Golden Age
Two ageing spinsters, who are both vying for the attentions of the rector of their church, are united in just one thing: their hatred for Selia Ross, an attractive newcomer to the village who they think is having an affair with the local doctor.

In Overture to Death, when the main characters get together at a meeting at the village Squire’s house to plan an amateur theatre production to raise money for a new church piano, it becomes obvious to the reader that the story can end in only one way…

In this eighth Chief Inspector Alleyn novel, Ngaio Marsh draws on her own theatrical background when she describes the preparations the organisers make for the performance of a play in the Parish Hall in the vale of Pen Cuckoo in Dorset.

She sets the stage cleverly, giving examples of the extent of the rivalry between the two old women in the past and how far they are prepared to go to get the rector’s attention.

Her characterisation of the spinsters is excellent as she reveals how both women disapprove of the blossoming relationship between the Squire’s son, Henry, and the rector’s daughter, Dinah, who is a young professional actress.

The artist, Agatha Troy, does not appear in this novel, published in 1939, but she is always present in the background.  

After the explosive murder scene, Detective Chief Inspector Alleyn and Detective Inspector Fox are sent by Scotland Yard to investigate.

Ngaio includes a letter Alleyn writes to Troy, while he is away from London working on the case, in which he reveals that they are engaged and speculates on what their marriage will be like.

The HarperCollins 2001 edition
of the 8th Inspector Alleyn mystery
Alleyn’s original Watson, the journalist Nigel Bathgate, is sent to Dorset to cover the murder story and he assists Alleyn in the investigation.

Ngaio Marsh, who died on 18 February 1982 in her native New Zealand, contributed to both art and the theatre during her life. She was also judged to be one of the four Queens of Crime during the Golden Age of detective fiction.

Her 32nd and final crime novel, Light Thickens, was completed only a few weeks before her death. The story revolves around one of her greatest theatrical passions, Shakespeare’s play, Macbeth.

Ngaio began writing detective novels in 1931 after moving to London to start up an interior decorating business. The idea for her first crime novel, A Man Lay Dead, came to her when she was living in a basement flat off Sloane Square.

In the preface to an omnibus edition of her first three novels - A Man Lay Dead, Enter a Murderer and The Nursing Home Murder - Ngaio describes how she came up with the character of Detective Inspector Roderick Alleyn.

It was a wet Saturday afternoon and she had been reading a detective story borrowed from a library, although she says she couldn’t remember whether it was ‘a Christie or a Sayers.’ After she finished it, she wondered whether she could write something similar and braved the rain to go to a stationer’s shop to buy exercise books, a pencil, and a pencil sharpener.

She sat down to write what was to be the first of a series of crime novels featuring the gentleman detective Roderick Alleyn. Her fictional detective works for the Metropolitan Police in London even though he is the younger brother of a baronet. She named him after an Elizabethan actor, Edward Alleyn.

Several of her novels are set in the world of the theatre, which she knew well because she was a times an actress, director, and playwright. Along with Margery Allingham, Agatha Christie, and Dorothy L Sayers, Ngaio Marsh was to dominate the genre of crime fiction for the next 50 years.

I would recommend Overture to Death as a good example of a classic Golden Age mystery set in a respectable English village. It stands out because of its clever plot, which involves a highly ingenious and shocking murder method.

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20240215

Have His Carcase by Dorothy L Sayers

Background romance adds extra interest to investigation

The 2016 Hodder edition of the novel, first published in 1932
The 2016 Hodder edition of the
novel, first published in 1932
Lord Peter Wimsey’s character comes to life in Have His Carcase, the seventh novel by Dorothy L Sayers to feature her gentleman sleuth.

Instead of appearing as just an amiable aristocrat indulging himself with his detecting hobby, tolerated by Scotland Yard because of his status in society, he shows himself to be energetic and determined during this novel, which was first published in 1932, because he is trying to help the woman he loves.

Mystery novelist Harriet Vane is on a solitary walking tour along the south west coast of England when she discovers a dead body on the beach.

She has stopped for refreshment and a brief doze in the afternoon sun. But instead of just enjoying a peaceful picnic and then resuming her journey, she wakes up to find a corpse nearby. A man, who has had his throat slashed from ear to ear, lies spreadeagled on the rocks below her.

Harriet tries to gather evidence at the scene before the incoming tide sweeps the body out to sea. Then she finds she has to walk several miles before she can find a telephone to report her discovery to the police.

As a woman who has recently been acquitted of murder, a case featured in Strong Poison, a previous Wimsey novel, Harriet finds it unpleasant to come under suspicion and be the subject of police scrutiny again.

Ian Carmichael as Wimsey in a 1970s TV adaptation
Ian Carmichael as Wimsey
in a 1970s TV adaptation

But she does not have to wait long before Wimsey joins her at the seaside and involves himself in the investigation, having been tipped off by a journalist about Harriet’s predicament.

The amateur detective duo discover that it is a complicated case to solve and it involves them, and Bunter, Wimsey’s manservant, in painstaking work to try to break the alibis of their main suspects.

They also have to crack a secret code used by the murderer to communicate with his victim beforehand. This was the only part of the novel that I found less than riveting, as the codebreaking lasted for several pages that weren’t very interesting to read.

However, Wimsey’s character acquires more depth in this novel, and the ‘will they, won’t they?’ sub plot of their romance also adds interest to the story.

The couple part as friends at the end of the book, but Harriet has still not accepted Wimsey’s proposal of marriage, providing a major incentive for fans to keep reading!

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20240211

Death on the Cherwell by Mavis Doriel Hay

No Oxford degree for author but she found a good setting for a crime novel

The murder at the heart of this mystery occurs on the River Cherwell, stick popular with students today
The murder at the heart of this mystery occurs on the
River Cherwell, still popular with students today
Death on the Cherwell, a classic Golden Age detective story by Mavis Doriel Hay published in 1935, is set in a fictitious women’s college in Oxford. The novel appeared during the same year as Gaudy Night by Dorothy L Sayers, which was also set in a women’s college in Oxford. Both settings were loosely based on the colleges the authors had attended themselves.

Mavis writes at the beginning of the first chapter: ‘Undergraduates, especially those in their first year, are not, of course, quite sane or quite adult.’ The students featured in this novel come across as very young indeed, more like the girls in boarding school stories than intelligent students. Nevertheless, they make good amateur sleuths, who are as entertaining as they are industrious.

A group of first year girls, who have formed a secret society that meets on the roof of the Persephone College boathouse, come across the dead body of the college bursar lying in her canoe. She is later discovered to have drowned in the river but it is a mystery how her body ended up back in her own boat.

The police are called in but to begin with they assume it is a student prank that has got out of hand. However, the group of young ladies who found the body immediately suspect foul play and take the investigation into their own hands. 

Led by Sally Watson, whose older sister, Beryl, appeared in Murder Underground, the first crime novel by Mavis Doriel Hay, the undergraduates uncover the tangled secrets that led to the bursar’s death and follow up clues that point in the direction of a fellow student.

The British Library Crime Classics edition of Death on the Cherwell
The British Library Crime Classics
edition of Death on the Cherwell
Mavis Doriel Hay, who was born on either 12 or 13 February 1894, 130 years ago, in Potters Bar in Middlesex, attended St Hilda’s College in Oxford between 1913 and 1916. She published three mystery novels within just three years in the 1930s, Murder Underground, Death on the Cherwell, and the Santa Klaus Murder. 

After Murder Underground was published, Dorothy L Sayers wrote a review in the Sunday Times saying: ‘This detective novel is much more than interesting. The numerous characters are well differentiated, and include one of the most feckless, exasperating, and lifelike literary men that ever confused a trail.’

That exasperating literary man, Basil Pongleton makes an appearance in the author’s second novel, Death on the Cherwell, when he and his wife, Beryl, are visiting Beryl’s sister, Sally, in Oxford. But Sally doesn’t need any help from him to uncover the truth about the bursar’s death and her sleuthing efforts even earn her the respect of the investigating officer in the case, Detective Inspector Braydon.

Like Dorothy L Sayers, Mavis attended Oxford when women were allowed into the university to study, but were not allowed to graduate, and so she left the university empty handed. But because she was interested in the industries and handicrafts of rural Britain, she was later sponsored by the Agricultural Economics Research Institute of Oxford University to collaborate with another writer, Helen Fitzrandolph, on a series of works surveying rural industries

She went on to marry Helen Fitzrandolph’s brother, Archibald Menzies Fitzrandolph, in 1929. Sadly, he was killed in a flying accident during World War II. 

Mavis, who was also interested in quilting, went on to publish several books on crafts during her life. She died in 1979 at the age of 85.

Nearly 90 years after it was first published, Death on the Cherwell was republished by British Library Crime Classics. In his introduction to the novel in 2014, crime writer Stephen Booth regrets that Mavis Doriel Hay had such a short literary career and published just three detective novels. He says it is ‘even sadder’ that she was almost forgotten by crime fiction readers for so many years after her death and he was delighted that the British Library editions of her books were finally remedying that oversight.

I am sure lovers of classic crime novels will be glad to have the opportunity to get to know this author and will be fascinated by her portrayal of life inside a women’s college in Oxford, in the days when female students weren’t even considered worthy of being awarded degrees by the university they attended. 

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(River Cherwell pic by Steve Daniels via Wikimedia Commons)


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