This month for our Thematic Book Club, we went with
the theme “Replay.”
I happened to be listening to an episode of a favorite
podcast, Shedunnit with Caroline
Crampton, and she was featuring mystery books published every ten years from
1925 to 2025. She mentioned The Secret of
Chimneys by Agatha Christie and then Gaudy
Night by Dorothy L. Sayers.
My mind said, “Eureka!”
The
Secret of Chimneys is a book I read many times in my teen
years. The latter I’m not sure I read, but I have adored Dorothy L. Sayers ever
since I took a detective fiction course in my junior college days.
I hopped onto our Hoopla app and searched for The Secret of Chimneys. There were no
fewer than FOUR audiobook versions of the story. I clicked on each, checking
out the ratings and who the narrator was before settling on one that had a good
rating. (Age can also be a factor in the quality of the recording.)
What about Gaudy
Night? Was that also available? It was. Just one recording, but I grabbed
that too.
The
Secret of Chimneys was published in 1925, but it has a modern
style of fast-paced storytelling with lots of chipper dialogue. Even a hundred
years later, the humor brings the word romp
to mind. I kept thinking of
Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca, as he’s
being intimidated by the Nazis, and says, “Are my eyes really brown?”
Many of Agatha Christie’s books feature a detective of
some kind, like Miss Jane Marple or Hercule Poirot. However, there are a few standalone
novels such as The Man in the Brown Suit
and The Secret of Chimneys.
In this vein, we start the story with Anthony Cade who
is working as a tour guide in Bulawayo when he runs into his old pal, Jimmy
McGrath. McGrath has a commission to deliver a politically charged memoir manuscript
to the publisher in London for a whopping 1,000 pounds. But, he wants to go off
and do something else so he subcontracts the job to Anthony. Oh, and by the
way, can Anthony drop off these letters to one Virginia Revel? The poor girl
wrote some indiscrete messages and Jimmy feels she should have them back.
Considering the amount of money Anthony is about to make, how can he refuse?
Little does Anthony realize, there is more than one
party who wants to get hold of that memoir. There will be several attempts at
getting the memoir before he can get it to the publisher. Likewise, there is
far more to the letters than meets the eye.
Anthony and Virginia are soon deeply embroiled in a
complicated little plot and on their way to a house in the country called
Chimneys where we meet a host of funny characters including the lord’s
daughter, referred to as Bundle, who drives fast enough to make her dangerous.
Really, this is a just short of a farce. I loved the
whole thing and now I remember why I read it through so many times as a teen.
The audiobook enhances the experience and I may listen to it again before I
lose access. If you haven’t read this book and you like golden age murder mysteries,
grab a copy. You won’t regret it!
Gaudy
Night was an interesting book but it weighs in at a
whopping 450 pages. Perhaps it could have been shorter but it slowly develops
the relationship between Harriet Vane and Lord Peter Whimsey while Harriet
investigates an increasingly dangerous series of destructive pranks and poison
pen letters at her old university. It delves deep into the difficulty of getting
an education as a woman in the 1930s and hints at the coming world war as the
world was in the grips of a depression, with one working man going so far as to
suggest that what England needed was a Hitler. It’s a far ranging literary
mystery and I enjoyed it thoroughly.
I actually ended up reading four different books this month. I finished The Dark Vineyard, book two in the series by Martin Walker, set in
the Dordogne region of France. From the solid Chief of Police, Bruno, with his
concern for the well-being of the people in St. Denis over the letter of the
law, and the beautiful descriptions as well as the solid pursuit of truth, I
can’t recommend this enough. I found it interesting that though there is some
very dangerous sabotage of a GMO farming facility and fields, the murder does
not happen until quite far into the book. An unusual choice, but it suits the
style of story. It’s a very methodical and relaxing read with excellent setting
and characterization.
The fourth book I finished in record time — The Little Lost Library by Ellery
Adams. It’s a much lighter cozy mystery, heavy on dialogue with very
sympathetic characters. There’s a sad story behind this one but one of the main
premises of this series is the healing power of books, so that makes sense. The
main character, Nora, runs her own bookstore. She takes books to a recluse
named Lillian on a regular basis but doesn’t realize the extent of Lillian’s
book hoarding because she is never allowed inside the house. There’s a lot Nora
doesn’t know about Lillian and the book reveals all the secrets contained in
the house bit by bit. It was a lovely, fast paced cozy mystery that I would
also recommend to any fan of the genre.
All in all, it was a fabulous month of reading in hard
copy, ebook and audio. What more could I ask for?
Next month’s theme is Elementals, as in Earth, Water, Air, and Fire. It’s a pretty broad theme so I’m sure I’ll find some good
mysteries to fulfill the mandate.
Happy Reading!
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