After
my rave review quite a while back of what seems to be Mabel Esther Allan's earliest
surviving novel, Return
to the West, written in the 1930s but not published until 2013, and my
enjoyment of Allan's early novel for girls Margaret
Finds a Future (1954), which I briefly discussed here,
I could hardly resist dipping my toe a little deeper into Allan's enormous (nearly
200 books!) body of work, and I've been quietly reading away on several more of
her works.
The trouble is, I've been lazy about taking good notes on these books. So I'm taking this opportunity to discuss a few of them in brief. (But of course not too briefly, because "brief" isn't exactly my middle name, so I will still have to split this into two posts.)
After
reading Margaret, I ordered two of
the three mysteries that Greyladies has reprinted by Allan. Only the first, Murder at the Flood, was actually
published in Allan's lifetime. After that title, the publisher went out of
business, and apparently Allan never placed the other two, Death Goes to Italy and Death
Goes Dancing, with an alternate publisher.
Honestly,
it's not all that hard to see why. As mysteries, I didn't find either Murder at the Flood or Death Goes to Italy to be any great
shakes. The latter I found stronger, in terms of the working out of the puzzle
(though one factor playing into the character motivations—involving an adopted
child—was absolutely bewildering to me), but it was still almost obvious enough for even a dunderhead like myself to sort
out. And Murder at the Flood wasn't
even that much of a challenge. So if
you want clever, entangled plots and heavily-veiled but believable motives from
your mysteries, you might just as well give these a miss.
On the
other hand, most of you know I'm more interested in the detail, the characters,
and the glimpses of ordinary life that mysteries often put front and center
than I am in solving a puzzle. I have a sense that many of you approach your
reading in similar ways, and if you do there are certainly some selling points
for Mabel Esther Allan's mysteries.
For
me, Murder at the Flood in particular
had these selling points. Set in Marshton on the Norfolk coast during the
terrible floods of 1953, it is rich in setting and in believable and
entertaining characters, even if it's a little rough around the edges as a
mystery. It follows Emily Varney, wife of the parson in Marshton, who, we
learn, is secretly a successful mystery author, but she has wanted to keep this
a secret from gossipy neighbors (some of whom are fans of her pseudonymous
work). She now finds herself (as detective writers seem highly prone to do) in
the midst of a murder investigation herself, and must work behind the scenes to
stop the suspicions flying in all directions—including some directed at herself
and her husband.
The
flood waters arrive almost as soon as the novel is under way, and they arrive
in appropriately dramatic fashion:
But when the door was opened it was Mrs. Sainty who burst in,
clutching a shabby umbrella, a bulging string bag and an equally bulging
plastic handbag that had seen much better days.
"Oh! Oh!" she cried, her grey hair wild and her
unbecoming hat hanging over one ear, held by the stout hatpin that she always
wore. "Oh, how I got up here no one will ever know! Never should have done
if this terrible wind hadn't been behind me! I got the earlier bus because
there was nothing on at the pictures and of course I went right round to the
shop. No churchyards for me once it's dark! And I heard it coming as I passed
round the back of the bus. Like an express train-believe me! But we should be
safe here and thank the good God for letting me get here safely. There's a many
will be dead this very minute.
…
"I looked back and saw it hit Mr. Abel-Otty's house. Like
a bomb, it was, and one wall just seemed to crumble. They'll be up here, all
those who can. But they'd be caught in their houses—they'd never even
know!"
After
the worst has hit, Emily observes the devastation from the vicarage windows:
The daylight was now almost gone, but there was just enough to
make them all draw in their breath sharply. For where there had been miles of
marshland there was now only a tossing, heaving sea. It broke not more than a hundred
yards away at the foot of the hill that held Vicarage and church, and the
little houses below looked like arks, half-submerged. Swiftly Emily moved to
another window that gave a wide view westwards and inland. The water there was
still moving, not perhaps as fast as an express train, but quickly enough to
leave damage and death in its wake, giving only those people who had noticed
what was happening time to quit their houses and farms and perhaps not even
then.
Whatever
other weaknesses Allan may have had as a writer, she could certainly describe a
dramatic landscape.
The victims in both of these mysteries were those conveniently loathsome creatures, lacking in any redeeming qualities, that mystery writers love to use to avoid causing any upset to their readers when they finally get the axe (figuratively, not literally, in this case). They're convenient, too, because virtually everyone on the scene might legitimately have wanted them dead.
Fortunately,
though, some of the other characters are more creative and interesting. In Murder at the Flood, there's the
tortured 12-year-old poetry lover Betony Long, whom Emily tries to help with
her troubled home life. And there are the requisite eccentric villagers who on
one or two occasions provide some highly entertaining comic relief:
"Do we be murdered we may as well 'ave our cocoa first,
that's what I say!" croaked the old woman.
"No one else is going to be murdered!" said the
Colonel testily.
Mrs. Gotts gave him a knowing look and mumbled something about
having heard that before.
Some
may find the outcome of the mystery in Murder
at the Flood surprisingly gruesome for what is basically a "cozy"
mystery. But the book is otherwise a pleasant and highly atmospheric read. If
you've never read Allan before, you might be better off starting with Return to the West or with one of the
many books she wrote for children—her specialty far more than mysteries ever
were. But if you're already a fan, you'll likely find these two titles an
enjoyable few hours.
More
recently, I've read the two new acquisitions I mentioned in my recent post on
my compulsive shopping over the holidays. I started with Catrin in Wales (1961), which was a quite enjoyable read but
perhaps, somehow, a bit of a disappointment. Its strengths are Allan's usual
strengths: she's stellar at describing landscapes and historic sites and making
one feel that one is right there looking at them too. In this case, the setting
is a village outside of the town of Llangollen, and a historic priory dating
back quite a few hundreds of years. (Sadly, there's no mention of the famous
"ladies of Llangollen" or their house, which remains to be seen on
the outskirts of town. Perhaps a lesbian couple from the 1700s was deemed a bit
too edgy for a children's story?)
Catrin in Wales has much in common with Margaret Finds a Future—a young woman on
the cusp of adulthood, somewhat at loose ends, who finds her future by helping
out at a National Trust house and encountering the locals, some hostile, some
friendly, and one, perhaps, a bit more than friendly. So perhaps I felt a bit
too much like I had read the story before (since I more or less had).
That
said, however, the novel passed the time for me quite cheerfully, and the virtual
sightseeing it offers is completely enjoyable :
I came presently to what seemed to be the first of the Priory
buildings—a building that might once have been a gatehouse, though now it
seemed to be used as a barn. Beside it a footpath struck across a field, and it
seemed a quicker way than the curve of the road. The grass was soaking wet, but
I was wearing heavy walking shoes and did not mind.
Soon I could see the Priory much better, and it looked very
impressive against the sharp pale cliff that ended the valley. I seemed to be
looking at the whole length of the ruined church. There was a row of pointed
arches and part of the central tower. At the western end of the nave were two
more towers, one roofless and the other, apparently, whole. I knew almost
nothing then about monastic ruins, but I was awed by the grandeur of the
pillars and soaring arches.
After all, the footpath did not save me much walking, for it
wound around to the eastern end of the ruins and brought me back to the road
again, close to a great gateway in a high wall.
A cuckoo was calling nearby, but there were few other sounds
and I felt that I had the place entirely to myself. Very slowly I walked under
the gateway arch and found myself on a green lawn—the cloister garth, as I
learned later. I drew in my breath sharply, for the dark young farmer had told
me correctly. On the west side of the grass, and somehow absolutely part of the
ruins, was an incredibly ancient-looking house. It was built of gray stone, and
the roof was so thickly covered with bright green moss that the slates or tiles
were almost invisible. The windows were mullioned and creepers hung down over
the thick old door, which had an old-fashioned bell rope.
I was
eating up this sort of detail, even if the story which followed was a bit less
inspired (or original) than other of Allan's work.