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Showing posts with label Poisoned Pen Press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poisoned Pen Press. Show all posts

19 April 2016

Teaser Tuesday - Miles Burton's The Secret of High Eldersham



Amazon Description
Samuel Whitehead, landlord of the Rose and Crown, is a stranger in the lonely East Anglian village of High Eldersham. When the newcomer is stabbed to death in his pub, and Scotland Yard are called to the scene, it seems that the veil dividing High Eldersham from the outside world is about to be lifted. Detective-Inspector Young forms a theory about the case so utterly impossible that merely entertaining the suspicion makes him doubt his own sanity. Surrounded by sinister forces beyond his understanding, and feeling the need of rational assistance, he calls on a brilliant amateur and 'living encyclopedia', Desmond Merrion. Soon Merrion falls for the charms of a young woman in the village, Mavis Owerton. But does Mavis know more about the secrets of the village than she is willing to admit?Miles Burton's novels have long been neglected as mere puzzles, but his skill at elaborating intricate plots, combined with their realistic village settings, mean that the best of his books deserve a broad new readership.Like the novels of Freeman Wills Crofts, Burton's best work is fast-paced and crisply told, and The Secret of High Eldersham - which uncovers ancient secrets in sleepy rural England - is among the most entertaining of all his crime stories
Mini-Ramble
I love the writing style of this as it very much has the "Golden Age" feel (which would make sense since it was first released in 1930). Even though the story line seems to be one huge long tangent after another at times it still ends up making sense. 
I absolutely adore Poisoned Pen Press and their British Library Crime Classic series (and, of course, NetGalley for making me aware of them). SO many amazing authors that I had never heard of before -- including Miles Burton, the author of The Secret of High Eldersham which is being re-released by PPP on June 7th. Surprisingly (to me, at least), this is the first of something like SIXTY titles featuring the character Desmond Merrion written over a thirty year span. I've already scoured my usual places for unusual titles and now I'm just left sitting here hoping that PPP decides to re-release all of them ... and quickly. 

31 October 2015

Happy .... Christmas?

I know, it's really Halloween ... but I'm rambling today about two Christmas titles that I received from NetGalley so deal with it.

The first is Anne Perry's A Christmas Escape, due to be released on November 10th.


I believe this is Perry's thirteenth "Christmas" book, though it's the first I have read. Receiving my copy from NetGalley was a good excuse to finally get off my duff and read something of Perry's -- which I've been meaning to do for years.

Overall it was an enjoyable short read. I'm only giving it three stars out of five, though, because of the lack of seasonality that I was anticipating.

Charles Latterly (the brother-in-law of Perry's Victorian detective William Monk) is vacationing before Christmas on the volcanic island of Stromboli. The property where he is staying already has a handful of other guests who all know eachother -- teenager Candace Finbar and her great- uncle, the married bickering Baileys, uppity Colonel Bretherton and novelist Quinn. Charles immediately bonds with the Finbars and the property owner, Stefano. He's also immediately aware of the tension surrounding his relaxing vacation -- not only from his fellow guests but also from the volcano.

Between the bickering, a murderer in their midst, and a volcano getting ready to blow any real Christmas-y feel was lost. I had almost even forgotten that it was supposed to be a "holiday mystery" when a "Merry Christmas" was offered up at the very end. Still a decent little story and the descriptions of the scenery and the volcano were wonderful, but as a "holiday" read it's not one I'll add to my list of seasonal re-reads.

More likely to be on my holiday re-read list is the anthology from Poisoned Pen Press, Silent Nights, being published on November 3rd.



I love Poisoned Pen Press and they're commitment to uncovering lost treasures from the Golden Age of detective fiction and this anthology definitely fits. There are fifteen stories in all with a mixture of familiar and unfamiliar tales. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes, Dorothy L. Sayers' Lord Peter Wimsey, Margery Allingham's Albert Campion, and G.K. Chesterton's Father Brown all make appearances. These stories alone will be worth the purchase price for many fans, but I was more excited about some of the stories by authors I hadn't read, with three standing out for me more than the rest:

Leo Bruce's "Beef For Christmas" had me chuckling from the get-go and wondering why the heck I was unfamiliar with the characters -- especially after doing a search on Goodreads and seeing that there are eight Beef books I now have to add to my TBR. Swell. Thanks a lot, Poisoned Pen Press.

Edmund Crispin's "The Name On The Window" has added another eleven titles to my TBR since I need to find out more about Fen ... and whether or not he's always as flippant as he was here. I'm hoping that he was because I do so love a good bit of flippancy. Not a Christmas-tale, really, but I'll let them slide.

Ethel Lina White. Who? Oh ... the woman who wrote the stories that The Lady Vanishes and The Spiral Staircase were based on? Two of my favorite classic thrillers? I hang my head in shame at my ignorance ... and then perk up in delight that I have, yes, even more to read. "Waxworks," according to the introduction in the book was in print before White's first novel was published. I see, now, that there is also a novel by White titled Wax and I hope that it's a blown-up version of this story ... but, of course, different enough that I won't know what will happen.

16 September 2015

Rambling about Mavis Doriel Hay's The Santa Klaus Murder

Last week, I started to debate what I would read this year for my annual "All Christmas All The Time" read-a-thon starting at Thanksgiving and went to see what NetGalley might have to offer up. I saw two Christmasy offerings from Poisoned Pen Press and was immediately curious. I first heard about PPP and their line of "British Library Crime Classics" thanks to NetGalley. Golden Age mysteries that I had never read -- by authors I had never heard of?!? Consider me sold and requesting! 

Aaaah, the Golden Age. 

Primarily written in the 1920s and 1930s, Golden Age mysteries were typically "whodunnits" featuring a detective and sometimes a sidekick like Poirot had Hastings and Campion had Lugg. Red herrings were prevalent and the tales often featured the upper-class as victims and/or villains. They were the early "cozies" of the mystery genre. I even overheard someone in the library one day explaining that Agatha Christie was "like the grandmother of the cozy." Nothing very gruesome or gory with the crime frequently happening before the narration begins or soon thereafter. 

Ronald Knox, a Golden Age author himself, wrote the following ten rules for the genre in 1929 (copied from Gotham Writers Workshop):
  • The criminal must be someone mentioned in the early part of the story, but must not be anyone whose thoughts the reader has been allowed to follow.
  • All supernatural or preternatural agencies are ruled out as a matter of course.
  • Not more than one secret room or passage is allowable.
  • No hitherto undiscovered poisons may be used, nor any appliance which will need a long scientific explanation at the end.
  • No Chinaman must figure in the story.
  • No accident must ever help the detective, nor must he ever have an unaccountable intuition which proves to be right.
  • The detective must not himself commit the crime.
  • The detective must not light on any clues which are not instantly produced for the inspection of the reader.
  • The stupid friend of the detective, the Watson, must not conceal any thoughts which pass through his mind; his intelligence must be slightly, but very slightly, below that of the average reader.
  • Twin brothers, and doubles generally, must not appear unless we have been duly prepared for them.
  • So ... these were the "rules" for the Golden Age. For authors such as Agatha Christie. She, along with Margery Allingham,  Dorothy L Sayers, and Ngaio Marsh were considered to be the "Queens of the Golden Age" but were not by any means the only females writing mysteries at the time. Some others wrote dozens of novels ... some wrote far fewer. Mavis Doriel Hay wrote three between 1934 and 1936.  


    The Santa Klaus Murder was first published in 1936 and takes place at Sir Osmond Melbury's country estate, Flaxmere. Sir Osmond is more than a bit controlling and cantankerous but the entire family and a few guests come home to celebrate Christmas anyway. It was expected of them. (Only one of his four children had ever not done what was expected and has been suffering for it ever since.) 

    Those in attendance for the festivities (aside from the household staff) include:
    * Sir Osmond's sister Mildred, who is an aging gossip who is only happy when being listened to and is quite bitter about replaced in the household's keeping by the pretty young secretary, Grace Portisham
    * Son George, who now runs the family business,  with his uptight wide and their three spoiled children
    * Widowed daughter Hilda and her daughter Carol
    * Daughter Edith and her husband David (no children for them)
    * Daugher Jennifer who still lives at home
    * Philip Cheriton who is in love with Jennifer and vice-versa
    * Oliver Witcomb who is Sir Osmond's choice for Jennifer's future husband

    Sir Osmond had ordered a Santa outfit to be worn by Oliver on Christmas Day for his grandchildren. When it didn't arrive, Grace ordered a new one to be rushed out. Crisis diverted! Happy holidays for all!  Well, as happy as anything ever was at Flaxmere ... Aunt Mildred always said that no good would ever come from having them all together. 

    Aunt Mildred was right. Sir Osmond is found shot in the head in his study. A study, of course, with locked doors and windows.

    The local chief constable, Colonel Halstock, arrives on the scene with his team to investigate. They soon discover that almost everyone in attendance had motive but not means ... and the one guest who may have had the means did not seem to have a motive. The true happenings of Christmas Day are finally discovered by Halstock ... after several missteps and red herrings ... with the help of his team, the suspects themselves, and an actor named Kenneth Stour who happened to be staying nearby (and who also happened to be the former flame of married Edith).

    Out of curiosity, I went through the list of Knox's rules to see if they all fit and he would have been pleased. All of the rules were followed to a T (although I don't at all agree with the "stupid friend of the detective" label so just cross out "stupid," okay?) and it was a delightfully puzzling tale on top of it all. 

    I found myself coming to the end of the book with a bit of dismay knowing that Hay only wrote three and this was the last. There would be no future mentions of whatever happened to this character or that. Luckily, Poisoned Pen Press has already released (or, rather, re-released) her other two books and after how much I enjoyed this one I'll be picking those up soon, I'm sure. Maybe I'll discover that Hay was a rule-breaker and snuck in a Chinaman or two. Maybe even secret twins with supernatural abilities....

    15 September 2015

    #TeaserTuesday # 28 - The Santa Klaus Murder by Mavis Doriel Hay

    The Book & The Tease

    Mavis Doriel Hay - The Santa Klaus Murder

    Originally published in 1936.
    Re-released October 6, 2015 by Poisoned Pen Press.
    Review copy courtesy of PPP and NetGalley.
    Full ramble coming tomorrow!

    Personal Disclaimer: I normally hold off on Christmas-y books until Thanksgiving unless part of a series I'm in the midst of .... or, now, NetGalley giving me a few ahead of time! 


    The Meme