I promise that the third and final section of the Mystery List will be coming within the next week. It's been delayed just a bit because this has been a busy couple of weeks (more on that later), and I still need to track down more lovely cover images to share with you.
Meanwhile, just what I need—and no doubt just what you all need as well—are yet more intriguing, new (to me, at least) authors that I’m feeling compelled to check out. Here are eleven from the most recent update to my Overwhelming List that particularly jumped out at me. I’ve already written about one of these and have read books by two others which I’m hoping to write about here soon (you see how hard I work for you lovely readers?).
Meanwhile, just what I need—and no doubt just what you all need as well—are yet more intriguing, new (to me, at least) authors that I’m feeling compelled to check out. Here are eleven from the most recent update to my Overwhelming List that particularly jumped out at me. I’ve already written about one of these and have read books by two others which I’m hoping to write about here soon (you see how hard I work for you lovely readers?).
I’m always drawn to humorous
writers—both the zany and the more subtly ironic—so it’s not surprising that
the first of these authors I was drawn to was Margaret Hassett,
whose Austen-esque Sallypark
I already wrote about a while back. (And I just happened to be looking today at Worldcat to check availability for Hassett's other three novels, and found that, wonder of wonders, someone currently has her final novel, Beezer's End, checked out from the Texas A&M University Library. Could it be a reader of this blog? Or has someone else discovered Hassett on his or her own? Either way, I sense a kindred spirit in Texas!)
Along the same lines
(perhaps) is CATHERINE GAYTON, who
appears to have written only four novels and a collection of stories. Gayton apparently specialized in romantic
comedies set in the Victorian period, such as That Merry Affair (1945), Young
Person (1947) and Poor Papa
(1953), though Adeliza (1952) is set
earlier, in the 1830s. Is Gayton a “lost”
Georgette Heyer? Or merely a pale
imitation? There’s only one way to find
out!
This update also included two
writers who definitely seem to be on the zanier end of the spectrum. I can’t wait to sample JOSEPHINE BLUMENFELD’s Pin a Rose on Me (1958), the “madcap” tale of “a middle-aged
English woman's quest for independence.”
Apart from that novel, Blumenfeld apparently only published stories and
sketches, all of them humorous and domestic in subject matter. Could anything be more perfectly up my alley? Well, we shall see.
And
then there’s MARY DUNN, who seems to be a bit less obscure than most of the writers in this update. She was a children’s author and travel
writer, but seems to be best remembered for her creation of Lady Addle, a pretentious
Edwardian precursor to Hyacinth Bucket, in Lady Addle Remembers (1936)
and its sequels, including Lady Addle at Home (1945), The Memoirs of
Mipsie (1947), and Round the Year with Lady Addle (1948). I can’t resist. Some of Dunn’s work has been reprinted in
recent decades—have any of you already sampled her wares?
For
a change of pace, there are also a couple of serious writers I feel I should check
out in this update. DOT ALLAN was the Scottish author of 10 novels, including Makeshift (1928), about the troubled adolescence of an aspiring writer, and Hunger March (1934), which explores
class conflict in Depression-era Glasgow—both of which were reprinted by the Association
for Scottish Literary Studies in 2010. Allan’s
other work includes Deepening River
(1932), a saga about a Glasgow shipbuilding family, and three late novels which
were reprinted in 2011 by Kennedy & Boyd—Mother of Millions (1953), The
Passionate Sisters (1955), and Charity
Begins at Home (1958). Is this a proper revival of Allan's work, or merely a brief academic flirtation?
Then
there’s ELIZA MARIAN BUTLER, who wrote as
E. M. Butler, and who was suggested to me by Lisa Perry, who was also kind
enough to forward to me a photo of the dust jacket of Silver Wings (1952), the second of Butler’s
two novels. Butler was better known as
an academic who published scholarly studies of German literature and culture as well as biographies
of Sheridan (1931) and Rilke (1941). But
after her retirement she published two novels with the Hogarth Press, Daylight in a Dream (1951) and Silver Wings. Although they received mixed reviews, I am
finding myself drawn to them.
Lisa
Perry was also the one who suggested one of the two particularly intriguing mystery
authors in my most recent update. EDWARD
CANDY was really Barbara Alison Neville and published three mysteries, as
well as some intriguing non-mystery fiction.
Stay tuned for more about her in upcoming posts, and thanks again to Lisa for suggesting her.
And
if my current Interlibrary Loans are successful, you’ll also be reading more about
the other intriguing mystery writer I’ve just added to the list. As soon as I
read a contemporary review of EILEEN HELEN CLEMENTS’ Cherry Harvest, I knew I had to track it
down: “An amusing tale of mystery concerning a strange assortment of people
heading to a country estate where they will be living during the duration of
WWII but they have a lot of adjusting to do with each other and then there is
the matter of the dead body.” Need I say
more?
I
don’t know much about CONSTANCE RUTHERFORD except that she never lingered
for long in one genre. Of her six
novels, The Lily Field (1933) is set
during the Hundred Years War, The
Forgotten Terror (1938) is an acclaimed mystery, Double Entry (1939) is about time travel and the seduction of the
past, and The Door Without a Key
(1948) is a psychological spy story. But
it’s Double Entry that is calling to
me most seductively. Described as an “[u]ncommon
fiction about a girl living in a French
Chateau who finds herself able to transport herself back to the 14th Century,”
the book evokes Marghanita Laski’s The
Victorian Chaise-Longue. The review
goes on to note that the girl’s time-travelling is then exploited by her archaeologist
husband. Now if only I can track down a
copy…
A
while back, Peggy
Ann added another author to my TBR list with a post on HELEN W. PRYDE’s charming-sounding McFlannels
series, about a working class Glasgow family.
These titles include The First
Book of the McFlannels (1947), The
McFlannels See it Through (1948), McFlannels
United (1949), and McFlannel Family
Affairs (1950). Sadly, it looks like
I’ll have my work cut out searching for them.
And finally, a perhaps rather
inexplicable addition to this list.
Sometimes I operate by instinct alone when I’m attracted to a particular
author. And sometimes, truth be told, my
instincts are a bit wonky. But I can
only say that, despite finding no significant information about them at all, I
am quite attracted to the early novels of EDITH
BRILL, who later became much better known for her books about the culture and history of the
Cotswolds. I know nothing at all about The
Mink Coat (1930), New Bed (1931), Heart Alone (1933), Three
Maids of Islington (1933), or London Ladies (1934), but I can’t help
feeling there is something for me in them.
Am I wrong?
Hope you enjoy the list and come across some new
discoveries of your own!
Scottish author of 10 novels; Hunger
March (1934), explores class in Glasgow during the Depression; Makeshift (1928) is about the troubled
adolescence of an aspiring writer; other titles are The Deans (1929), Deepening
River (1932), and John Mathew,
Papermaker (1948).
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JOSEPHINE
[SALIE] BLUMENFELD (1903-1982)
(married name Bott)
Wife of Pan Books founder Alan Bott; known for anecdotes such as those
in Shrimps for Tea (1930), Heat of the Sun (1948), and See Me Dance the Polka (1962),
Blumenfeld wrote at least one novel, Pin
a Rose on Me (1958), the “madcap” tale of “a middle-aged English woman's
quest for independence.”
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EDITH BRILL
(1899-????)
(married name Timperley)
Probably best remembered now for various
books about the culture and history of the Cotswolds, Brill makes my list
because of five novels published in the 1930s—The Mink Coat (1930), New
Bed (1931), Heart Alone (1933), Three Maids of Islington
(1933), and London Ladies (1934).
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ELIZA MARIAN BUTLER (1885-1959)
(aka E. M. Butler)
Best known for her scholarly studies of German literature and culture
and biographies of Sheridan (1931) and Rilke (1941), after her retirement
from academia Butler published two short novels, Daylight in a Dream (1951) and Silver Wings (1952); her memoir, Paper Boats, appeared in 1959.
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EDWARD CANDY (1925-1993)
(pseudonym of Barbara Alison Neville, née Boodson)
Medical professional and author of 12 novels, including three mysteries—Which Doctor (1953), Bones of Contention (1954), and Words for Murder Perhaps (1971); non-mysteries
include A Lady's Hand (1959), Parents' Day (1967), Doctor Amadeus (1969), and Scene Changing (1977).
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EILEEN HELEN
CLEMENTS (1905-1993)
(married name Hunter)
Author of nearly two dozen mystery thrillers from just before WWII
until the 1960s; her titles include Let
Him Die (1939), Perhaps a Little
Danger (1942), Weathercock
(1949), Over and Done With (1952), Discord in the Air (1955), Uncommon Cold (1958), and Honey for the Marshall (1960).
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MARY DUNN
(1900-1958)
Children’s author, travel writer, and humorist, best known for her
creation of Lady Addle, a pretentious Edwardian precursor to Hyacinth Bucket,
in Lady Addle Remembers (1936) and its sequels; her travel series
began with We Go to Paris in 1951.
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CATHERINE GAYTON (dates unknown)
More research
needed; intriguing author of four novels and a collection of stories; Gayton
specialized in romantic comedies set in the Victorian period, such as That Merry Affair (1945), Young Person (1947) and Poor Papa (1953), though Adeliza (1952) is set earlier, in the
1830s.
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MARGARET
HASSETT (c1898-????)
(pseudonym of Kathleen
Daly)
Author of four novels of the 1930s and 1940s, which appear to be
humorous family tales—Sallypark
(1945), about three daughters carrying on love affairs behind their strict
father’s back, Beezer's End (1949),
a sequel to Educating Elizabeth
(1937), and Next to These Ladies
(1940).
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HELEN
W[ATT]. PRYDE (1902-1955)
(née Renfrew)
Peggy Ann wrote about this one; author of a series of novels
based on a radio series featuring the McFlannels, a working class Glasgow
family, including The First Book of the
McFlannels (1947), The McFlannels
See it Through (1948), McFlannels
United (1949), and McFlannel Family
Affairs (1950).
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CONSTANCE
RUTHERFORD (c1887-1961)
Author of only
six novels which display impressive versatility—The Lily Field (1933) is set during the Hundred Years War, The Forgotten Terror (1938) is an
acclaimed mystery, Double Entry
(1939) is about time travel and the seduction of the past, and The Door Without a Key (1948) is a
psychological spy story. Whew!
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Thanks for the thanks! If I haven't read Silver Wings by the time we move back to the Bay Area in a year or so, I'll save it for you!
ReplyDeleteAnd now I have to find one of Catherine Gayton's novels. That's my maiden name. How fun!
I'll take you up on that offer, Lisa. :-) And how fun to discover a namesake author--perhaps she was a distant relative, do you know where your branch of the Gayton family hailed from?
DeleteI'm guessing maybe the village of Gayton in England, maybe. Via Canada. :)
ReplyDelete