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Tuesday, May 10, 2016

The Tuesday Night Bloggers: Throw Mama [or Anyone Else] From the Train!


The Tuesday Night Bloggers have decided to take a little different tack for the upcoming months...instead of featuring a particular author and their works each month, we're going to invest some time examining themes. This month's theme is Travel...murders while on holiday, murders on planes and trains and boats, murders by the seaside and murder in the mountains. However you might imagine a mystery taking place while traveling will be up for examination whether it be a trip to the islands, Britain's watering holes, or just a cross-country train journey.  Curtis over at The Passing Tramp has once again offered to host our weekly gatherings. Come and join us!

Last year, I did a feature on trains in vintage mysteries for Noah's October 8 Challenge. I'm going to steal from that post (and revise it a bit) for my second entry in May's TNB discussions.

Trains often play an important role in Golden Age mysteries. Murderers shove their victims from rail carriages or leave them behind after exiting themselves. Sometimes an alibi or a red herring depends on a railway timetable. Of course, probably the most famous train murder mystery is the Christie classic, Murder on the Orient Express featuring a disparate group of passengers, including the great detective Hercule Poirot, all snow-bound on the luxurious train and trapped with murder in their midst. The train itself and the enclosed, almost locked-room nature of its snow-bound circumstances are central the plot and determining who had the opportunity to murder the malevolent American, Mr. Ratchett.

But the characters don't have to stay on the train for the entire course of the novel for it to

be an important element. Like another Christie novel, 4:50 from Paddington (aka What Mrs. McGillicuddy Saw), Josephine Bell's Bones in the Barrow relies on what a witness sees from his train window to set the wheels of justice in motion. Terry Byrnes is making his slow way to work aboard a train to London. Progress is slow because a crippling fog has made visibility near zero. For just a moment the fog clears as the train sits and waits and Byrnes stares out the window while he contemplates how angry his boss will be over his extreme lateness. He has an unimpeded view of a row of houses along the track. The scene that unfolds before him is like a murderous silent film.

....framed in his hole in the fog, all the dirty windows of the four or five houses were empty. At the next, he saw in one of them the distorted face and frantic figure of a woman. She was in a state of extreme terror; that was clear from her fixed staring eyes and desperate snatching fingers. She was trying to throw up the window....This in absolute silence, as far as Terry was concerned, the window being shut, and the fog all round, still and deep....For a few seconds the woman fought the window. Then Terry saw a dark shape behind her in the unlighted room. She turned her head, her mouth opening in a scream as she did so. A hand struck, and she toppled forward....

By the time he understands what he's seeing, the fog closes in and the train starts moving. There's no time to make any of his fellow passengers see what he's seen. Already very late and reluctant to look foolish before the authorities, Byrnes doesn't report the incident until much later that evening. Chief Inspector Johnson is the only one who takes him seriously, but even he has difficulty finding evidence of any foul play. A number of other suspicious incidents will have to be reported before the event can be properly investigated and solved--but Johnson always comes back to that first report of violence witnessed from a train window.

Shroud of Darkness by E. C. R. Lorac also begins with a train ride through one of the worst fogs that England, and particularly London, has seen in "half a century." Riding in the same train car we have an upset young man, a psychiatrist's secretary, a large female writer with a deep voice, a businessman who looks very stockbrokerish, and an "eel-like," unsavoury young man who looks a bit like a racing tout. At journey's end the agitated young man is left for dead in the black, "monster of a fog" and the police have one monster of a mystery on their hands. After being beaten sensless, the victim's pockets are rifled and his haversack stolen and the police find themselves faced with a nameless injured man on an evening of near solid blackout when nobody could be expected to notice anybody or anything.

Once again, the police have to start with very little information beyond what the victim's fellow-travelers can tell them. Fortunately, the secretary and the businessman both prove to be excellent witnesses and Inspector MacDonald identifies the young man fairly quickly as Richard Greville. But discovering who he is doesn't answer all the questions and MacDonald still needs to find out what about that train journey resulted in the attack on the man. Did Greville recognize someone from his past? Or did something else happen? There are other clues to follow, but MacDonald keeps that train journey in mind throughout the book.

As might be suspected by the title, a train trip also plays an important part in Night Train to Paris by Manning Coles. Edward Logan is a stuffy, predictable, highly respectable businessman who just happens to get himself mixed up with secret plans and Russian spies and is killed when he tries to keep out their way by planning an unexpected trip to his brother Laurence in Paris.

Laurence is baffled by the odd request. Every time his brother has visited, it has been arranged long in advance, down to the last detail. His brother never does anything on the spur of the moment. Edward is very mysterious and will only tell him that it's a matter of life and death and that all will be explained when he sees Laurence. Laurence's bewilderment increases when he arrives at the station late to find an almost empty train and no sign of his brother. He heads to Edward's compartment and finds his luggage, passport, tickets, and hotel reservations laid out for custom inspection but Edward has vanished without a trace! Before he can decide what to do, the conductor comes and addresses him as Mr. Edward Logan.

Laurence spends the rest of the book masquerading as his brother and trying to determine what happened before and during that fateful train journey. We know--because we watched Edward from the entrance of the Russian spies to his last moments on the train--but it is still highly entertaining to watch Laurence puzzle things out and, assisted by Britain's master spy Tommy Hambledon, outwit the Russians in the end. Given the reader's knowledge, the focus of this book on the train journey is slightly different from those previously highlighted. In Night Train, the reader isn't trying to figure out what happened to whom (along with the detective), but are waiting to see what Laurence and Tommy must do to solve Edward's disappearance and how soon they will figure it out.


And finally we have The Two Tickets Puzzle by J. J. Connington. which combines several of the "murder by train" features. We have the dead body left behind by the murderer. A manufacturer, by the name of Preston is found dead under the seat of a railway carriage, wounded in several places. When the autopsy is complete, it is revealed that he was shot with bullets of two different calibres. Somebody made quick work of it--taking advantage of one of two uninterrupted stretches of the train journey. There are several likely suspects--from Preston's doctor, who is rumored to be carrying on with Preston's wife to his wife who married for money but didn't bargain on the type of man she was really marrying to the clerk from his factory, recently dismissed and mysteriously in possession of bank notes which Preston had just gotten from the bank that morning. We also have alibis that depend on the train schedule...and there is the little matter of the titular two tickets to resolve.

I think it is safe to say that travel by train in the Golden Age was a pretty iffy proposition--especially if you had managed to tick off a relative or two or inadvertently gotten mixed up in a bit of espionage.

Other train-related vintage mysteries/espionage for your reading pleasure (links are my reviews except where noted):
Novels
Death on the Last Train by George Bellairs
Avalanche by Kay Boyle

Death in the Tunnel by Miles Burton
The Mystery of the Blue Train by Agatha Christie 
The Cuckoo Line Affair by Andrew Garve
Murder Rides the Campaign Train by Mildred & Gordon Gordon
Stamboul Train by Graham Greene 
Strangers on a Train by Patricia Highsmith
F.O.B. Murder by Dolores & Bert Hitchens
The Midnight Mail by Henry Holt
Dread Journey by Dorothy B. Hughes
I Married a Dead Man by William Irish
Obelists En Route by C. Daly King (very difficult to find!)
Great Black Kanba by Constance & Gwenyth Little
The Ticker Tape Murders by Milton Propper
Tragedy on the Line by John Rhode
The Man in Lower Ten by Mary Roberts Rinehart
Five Red Herrings by Dorothy L. Sayers
The Wheel Spins (aka The Lady Vanishes) by Ethel Lina White 
Thrilling Stories of the Railway by Victor L. Whitechurch [courtesy of John at Pretty Sinister Books]
The Passenger from Scotland Yard by H. Freeman Wood

Short stories
"Beware of the Trains" by Edmund Crispin
"The Adventure of the Bruce-Partington Plans" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
"The Lost Special" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle 

Please feel free to comment below with any vintage (for my purposes, pre-1960) train-related mysteries that you see that I've missed.

 

8 comments:

  1. Great post and I liked how you touched on many less well known titles. Given me plenty of new titles to add to my TBR pile.

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  2. I agree with Kate, Bev. Lots of new/old stuff to explore. Maybe we SHOULD work up a mystery train trip together - all the Bloggers, first class! Wouldn't that be fun???

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  3. Brad--just don't bring any rivals, enemies, or mysterious strangers along. :-)

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  4. Blogger was down for about two and half hours when I was workign on this late last night. Very frustrating! My post for this week is therefore delayed, but is soon coming. I'm doing ships this week, specifically a wherry yacht which of course I had never heard of until I read the book.

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  5. Sounds good, John. When I see it, I'll add it to our collection on FaceBook.

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  6. It's up now. Here's the link: Death under Sail by C. P. Snow

    Because Curt didn't write anything on the travel theme today and didn't post the links I decided to take care of that. So I've posted links to your page, Kate's and Moira's at the bottom of my post. I didn't see any others with "Tuesday Bloggers" in their title. I keep calling this Tuesday Club because I can't get the Christie book allusion out of my head. I'll try to remember the real name next week.

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  7. So glad Mary Roberts Rinehart is on the list!

    One book to add to your list is The Deadly Travellers by Dorothy Eden.

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  8. Excellent collection! Some quite new to me, which is good for my reading if not for my TBR pile...

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