The first two Roger Scarlett novels, The Beacon Hill Murders and The Back Bay Murders, both appeared in 1930. The first novel details the murderous outcome of the invasion of Boston's exclusive Beacon Hill district by the Suttons, a family of well-heeled parvenus. That notorious "stock exchange gambler," Frederick Sutton, is determined to make his way into Boston society, but Boston society has remained rather dubious about the bumptious questing capitalist, with only the charming Mrs. Anceney, a prominent society widow, taking up his cause.
Something sinister is afoot in Beacon Hill! Can Inspector Kane discover who daringly slew Frederick Sutton in his his private sitting room? |
Brilliant Inspector Norton Kane of the Boston police is soon investigating the bizarre murder case, assisted (if that is the right word) by dutiful though not overly astute Sergeant Moran and his rather dim minion in blue, McBeath. Also on hand is the chronicler of the tale, the prim attorney Mr. Underwood, who was Frederick Sutton's disapproving attorney as well as a staunch friend of Inspector Kane.
Inspector Kane ventures into another quaint Boston neighborhood in the The Back Bay Murders, this time in a case concerning horrid slayings committed among the genteel paying guests of Mrs. Quincy's refined brownstone boarding house.
In The Back Bay Murders a brazen murderer strikes seemingly with impunity |
Although there is no locked room problem per se in The Back Bay Murders, the second murder in the novel presents aspects of one and the mystery plot overall is highly ingenious and pleasingly outre, presenting such teasing clues as bloodstains which are not actually blood and a cat toying with a feather.
It was this last feature of the novel that inspired the title of the most extreme plagiarization of a mystery novel known to me: a line by line swiping of The Back Bay Murders, done by an Englishman with seemingly no sense of shame whatsoever. It might have been enough to launch a second Boston Tea Party, as far as Dorothy Blair and Evelyn Page were concerned. More on this next post!
The new editions looks great, and I appreciate this second glimpse inside the books themselves!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Art!. Some more to come!
DeleteIt's a great pleasure to see their books to be reprinted. I am a big fan of Roger Scarlett myself after I read all their five books in the past few years. All of their books have been published in Japan long ago and finally we also published two of their books (Cat's Paw and In the First Degree) earlier this year!
ReplyDeleteYes, it was very interesting to see how the books were embraced by Japanese fans, when they were mostly forgotten in the US. I talk about that in the introduction.
DeleteThanks so much for alerting us to these reprints - they sound very much like the sort of mysteries I would enjoy. :) Is the quality of the mystery fairly even across these five novels, or are some of them stronger than the others? Would you have a favourite title among the five novels?
ReplyDeleteMy personal favorite probably is Cat's Paw, but the consensus favorite, at least in Japan, has been Murder among the Angells, which is remarkable with that setting and the nine floor plans!
DeleteBut the first two are very good as well, and they get you going in the proper sequence. The last one is good too. I would say that the Scarlett ladies maintained a high quality throughout the series. Why did they stop? Perhaps they felt they had exhausted the possibilities of their settings. Their devotion in the series to old mansions and complex domestic architecture is remarkable, reminds me of S. S. Van Dine and his beautiful brownstones.