This month at our Tuesday Night Bloggers meetings we will be examining mysteries
within a historical context--either historical mysteries (written, say
in 1930 but set in the Victorian period, for example) or which take
place during or around a historical event or which address historical
issues. The field is wide-open so if you have historical mysterious
thoughts to share,
please stop by for group discussion and I'll add your posts to the list. We
tend to focus on the Golden Age of crime fiction--generally accepted as
published between the World Wars, but everyone seems to have a slightly
different definition and we're pretty flexible. Essays on more recent crime
fiction are welcome as well.
This
week's Historical Experts:
Brad @ Ah Sweet Mystery Blog: "A Bientot, Poirot: Agatha Christie's Curtain"
Moira @ Clothes in Books: "History & Friends"
Kate @ Cross Examining Crime: "History & Mystery Quiz"
The Puzzle Doctor @ In Search of the Classic Mystery Novel: "Medieval Murders Par 2 1327 to 1485"
JJ @ The Invisible Event: "Who Can You Trust? Verisimilitude in Paul Doherty's A Murder in Thebes (1998)"
Week #1 Post
**************************
This week I am taking a look at previous review of Herbert Brean's Hardly a Man Is Now Alive (1950). In this novel Reynold Frame, one of Brean's two series characters, is
off to Concord, Massachusetts to marry his fiancee, Constance Wilder.
Frame is a world-class photographer who also has an assignment to do a
little job before he and Connie are married by the 104-year-old minister
who married her great-grandparents.
Frame
gets a bit side-tracked by rumors of a ghostly British soldier who is
said to haunt his room in a rooming house and then when he and his
bride-to-be discover the body of a man in the well behind the house it
looks like his amateur sleuth tendencies may hold up the wedding. The
man has been hit with the proverbial blunt instrument before being
bundled into the well. But the race is on to discover why the man was
murdered, who is really behind the "hauntings," and what secret the
murdered man had discovered in the town of Emerson, Thoreau and one of
the earliest battles of the Revolution in time to marry the girl of his
dreams. There is also another race against time--the elderly minister
disappears and Frame must rush to find him before it's too late. But
what could the villain of the piece want with the man who is the last
living link to an authentic story of the Revolutionary War? Before he is
done, Frame will not only solve a modern murder and kidnapping, but he
will also solve two historical mysteries....and still make it to the
church in time to transform Miss Wilder into Mrs. Frame.
Reynold
Frame and Connie Wilder are fun characters--and well-known to me since I
have also read the other books in the series. They have a lighter
banter than Nick and Nora Charles and make a good couple. The most
interesting character--and one I would have liked having more of--is Dr.
Annandale, the elderly minister. He may be 104, a bit bleary-eyed and a
bit hard of hearing, but his mind is sharp as a tack and he tells a
good tale.
There
is a lot of historical detail in this one--all of it vital to the
mystery. Details in both the stories of the original battle and the
death of the British soldier (who supposedly haunts the bedroom) help
Frame find threads which help him weave the stories behind the murder,
kidnapping and historical puzzles. Clues are plentiful and so are the
red-herrings. Several people in the rooming house and in the town are
behaving oddly and/or suspiciously and I kept changing my mind on the
culprit. I did manage to land on the correct one just prior to Frame's
explanatory letter to the police--after all he didn't want to get held
up at the police station giving lengthy explanations when he was
supposed to be at the church.
Readers
who are looking for a fun, cozy-style mystery with a historical back
drop will surely enjoy this one. Brean provides interesting historical
details--backed up by facts and fully explained in footnotes. A nice
peek at the beginning of the Revolutionary War and solid mystery all in
one.
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1 comment:
Ah, yes, Herbert Brean -- another author I've not checked out and need to. Dammit! Ah, well, I just won't send my kids to university...
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