Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Garden Update

It's been uncomfortably hot the past week and today it got a lot worse: it was in the mid 70s F during the night last night and now it is (according to weather.com) 99F.  In theory it will rain a bit on Friday and that should cool things down a bit--but it will still be hot.  Everything is still alive in the yard but nothing is producing anything but a lot of leaves.  

This is a squash or pumpkin or melon of some sort.  I have no idea since I bought all the seedlings months ago and then tossed the little plastic ID sticks away because I assumed I would remember.  And I would, if it was 70F outside and not 99F.  I just like to see those little vines gripping tightly to the jute trellis net I put up--everything working exactly as it should:


I do remember that is a watermelon plant--the one with the leaves that look a bit like oak tree leaves.  While I see plenty of blossoms on the various squash plants, I see no blossoms on the watermelon--and other people online are already talking about how to tell when the watermelon is ripe enough to pick. I know Michigan had a crazy cold spring, but I am starting to feel a bit cheated.


And, yes, the ground hog has been back, reducing this squash plant to a few leafless stumps.  I see that the plant sent out new leaves immediately--that one right in the middle, almost at the bottom of the picture, appeared overnight. So far, since I have tossed around hundreds of garlic cloves, the ground hog has not eaten anything aside from this plant. I hate to wish ill upon a hapless ground hog but I really do hope it has moved on either to another garden or a garden in the great beyond.

And finally, I gave up and bought cosmos seedlings and they are doing especially well. I used to buy sachets of cosmos seeds because they are advertised as being "foolproof" for getting millions and millions of flowers.  I have never, ever had a single one produce ANYTHING.  So, finally, I broke down and bought 20 or so teeny seedlings in a tray from WoJos (a nearby mom-pop nursery that I have concluded is better than Bordines) in April or so and now I am sold: making them do the work of germinating the seeds and paying $1 per plant is the only way to go for me from now on. What's nice about these plants (if you can get them to live) is that they love heat and produce hundreds of flowers all summer long. And they take up little space so can be planted among other things like tomatos. In theory they are "self seeders" but I don't believe it.


They Never Looked Inside by Michael Gilbert


This is the second book written by Gilbert, and it again features Inspector Hazlerigg.  Only this story places Hazlerigg on his home turf in London. We get to meet various people he works with--all competent (Gilbert doesn't go for knocking the police in his novels--all are reliable and quick-thinking and none are on the take) and work together like a well-oiled machine.  We also meet for the first time Major McCann, the Scottish ex-soldier we met in Death Has Deep Roots. I wrote in that blog that it was unclear why he was part of the investigation or what exactly his relationship with the father/son Rumbold lawyer team is. Well, this story makes clear how McCann goes from having too much time on his hands as an ex-soldier to working 20 hour days for Scotland yard as an emissary to the British military.  (The next book I have set out to read is The Doors Open which, according to the brief blurb on the back of the book, features "Nap" Rumbold, Rumbold the Younger. So once we get through that book, the whole gang will be assembled and their connections in Death Has Deep Roots will makes sense retroactively.)

This book was published in 1948 and was set in that time period, so WWII is officially over and soldiers are being de-mobbed and so are hanging around in London with no good job prospects and too much time on their hands.  Gilbert makes pretty clear how bad the economy in London was at that time: a lot of businesses and houses blown to bits leaving the supply chains unreliable and finding a place to live nearly impossible.  As a result, a lot of people are alive only because they are selling on a sort of gray market--selling goods and services in the wee hours without a license (not just selling alcohol and "cigarettes" made of random dried greenery but also selling meals, bakery, clothing, running a hair salon that only receives clients between 2 am to 4 am, renting rooms to tenants in odd spaces in attics and basements--spaces that are unsuitable for housing and so in violation of codes. Into all this sort of petty larceny you have the big time swindlers who are in the game for serious money, and who don't take kindly to people nosing around--it is this sort of racket that interests our Inspector Hazelrigg.  

I'm going to be honest: I don't completely understand exactly what the racket this novel concerns is.  I do know that there is a seriously evil person at the top of a pyramid (who has at least 5 aliases) and under him a handful of guys (none of whom know each other and each of whom answers to, let's use one of his aliases Mr. Brown, only by telephone).  Each of those guys recruits a team of guys whose job is to sit in various diners in the final hour before closing.  They wait for a young men (17 to early 20s, desperate for money and willing to engage in risk) to sit with them to be given an assignment.  These assignments amount to breaking into business safes and stealing whatever is there: money, bonds, jewelry, anything. Once they have the goods they drop it off at an appointed abandoned building. If the thieves have been tailed, the stuff is simply left to be found by the cops.  If the kids get away clean, someone else swings by to make a pick up and up the chain it goes.

The real secret of this operation is that it uses these low-level theives a few times--they are, effectively, disposable, so there is no risk of them ever learning too much about the operation.  And, since the business brings in unimaginable wealth, they don't sweat small losses because some guy happened to be at work late and interrupted an attempted breaking and entry.  All wins, no losses.

So far, this all sounds like a pretty typical mobster sort of operation, just one that has available a lot of desperate and damaged soldiers who are willing and able to break and enter.  But this is where it gets really strange and beyond my understanding: The real prizes are jewelry but NOT to sell as that would be too risky. Instead, the idea is to collect precious metals and jewels and melt them down and turn the gold into solid bars.  But that's not all!  Those bars are divvied up into small piles (say, 5 or 10 bars), and hidden inside military equipment, like canteens. THEN, the canteens are given to a random soldiers waiting to be sent back to France for various clean up tasks.  (British soldiers who stayed in the military for the paycheck were sent back to France, Italy and Germany to help hold things together while cities were being looted--plots of other Gilbert books.)  These soldiers gather in London and then get sent over to France on boats and from there, sent on trains to various locations. While in the port in France, they had to hang around for a few hours or days, awaiting orders. And that time spent waiting around is the perfect times for someone who is part of a massive black market racket to give these guys £20 for the "canteen" they carried over on the boat for a "friend."  They soldier thinks he's bringing over cigarettes--strictly speakig not allowed but everyone is doing it--when in fact he is participating in a massive international black market scheme.

But who is buying all this gold? APPARENTLY there were still people throughout Europe who used to be titled (Countesses, Marcheses, Czarinas, or whatever) who sewed baubles and bling into their clothes as they escaped from being killed by communists and anti-royalty Nazis. And now they want money--lots of it. But since the politics is still anti-royalty throughout Europe, they do not want to be associated with the loot of a thousand slave mines. So they sell their wares to men connected to Mr. Brown (though never Mr. Brown himself--no one sees that guy) in exchange for gold bars which are always be useful in any situation. THEN, and this is the cherry on top, they sign a notarized paper that testifies they sold the item in question 10 years earlier to a "friend who is a jeweler" in London BEFORE THE WAR BROKE OUT.  Of course this document is fraudulent, but what auction house in London can be arsed to verify a notarized certificate from some backwater town in bombed out Hungary?  They don't REALLY want to find out that the jewels they are selling for 10s of millions of pounds had been acquired illegally.  They just want a piece of paper they can use as a shield in case a lawyer starts poking around. And how do the rubies and emeralds get out of Italy and into London?  In the canteens of British soldiers being sent  back home who have been asked to take "cigarettes to a friend" who will meet them in the port in London. So easy!  

I guess it makes sense.  But I think it's one of those things that you had to be there to really appreciate.  It's hard to care that ex-royalty (at least in Germany there were no real royalty post-WWII as one of the first things Hitler did was make all royal titles illegal) are in a bind because they can't unload a ton of jewelry that other people died to supply them with. And it's hard to care that people are sneaking stuff into London to sell at inflated prices at fancy-pants auctions houses without paying import taxes....And it's hard to care that little old ladies are giving other old ladies hairdos at 2 am because they can't afford to renew their hairdresser's license...

So is this a good book?  Well, as always, the characters are engaging and the dialog snappy. Was I happy when the good guys caught The Bad Guy? Yes, because the good guys are pleasant company and The Bad Guy (Mr. Brown) really was unpleasant.  But what I really want to know is his backstory.  And how does one go about setting up such a business?  Is he like the arctic shrew Mr. Big in Zootopia who immigrates to the big city as a young shrew and ruthlessly clawed his way to the top, running the biggest mobster organization in the city all while listening to the velvety pipes of Jerry Vole? We'll never know.

  

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Close Quarters by Michael Gilbert


I wish this was the cover of the copy of my book as currently available editions are HIDEOUS--so hideous, in fact, I cannot bring myself to include the image in this blog entry.  (I have no idea what the phrase "guilt-edged security" means.  Or is it "quilt-edged security"?)

This book is Gilbert's first novel, published in 1947 though set in 1937.  This only reason to set it back 10 years is, I believe, to provide a story utterly untarnished by WWII.  The location is inside a "close" (hence the name of the book) and is very much like a 1930s Agatha Christie novel: the community of characters all live inside this church close which is closed to outsiders and lack any sort of modern technology--they don't have phones, weapons (other than walking sticks) and have to get help by running around town looking for a policeman on duty. While perhaps overly quaint, it's easy to see the appeal of such an approach--which is becoming increasingly common in movies and television shows now: they are either set in the 1970s so no one has cell phones or gps (so people can get lost, need to ask for directions and so on) and there is no Big Brother surveillance system taking over old-fashioned police work OR they are set in a current time but in a location that (rather artificially) cuts them off from all modern life (as in on an island or in the middle of the outback in Australia).  

This story is set inside a "residential close" (I am going to have to just accept that such things exist as they most certainly do not in this country) which has a church in the middle that is circled by 17 residences of varying sizes that house various Reverend Canons, Reverends who are not Canons, musical/choral directors, first, second and third "vergers" (I'm not sure what those people do--sort of lower level teachers and youth ministers by all accounts), a Dean, a groundskeeper and his family, various housekeepers who live with various Canons and Vergers, and wives and children if they are still alive and around. Surrounding all these residences is a 12' wall that has only two entrances, both of which have gates that lock at exactly 7 pm and after that time, the only way in is by yelling for the groundskeeper (or one of his 4 or 5 children who act as lookouts and see all) who can unlock the gate--but only until 11 pm. If you are late getting back from the pub or the cinema, you have to sleep somewhere else. The question of whether or not someone could climb over the wall is firmly rejected: they would need at least one 12' ladder (or, better two, one for each side of the wall) and the bobby on the beat would see them on the outside and the old ladies who spend all their free time curtain twitching would see them on the inside. So...all crimes must be committed by people who live inside the close.  That doesn't narrow the options much as that comes to about 50 people (closer to 35 once we eliminate the small children and fragile elderly).  

Our story begins from the point of view of the Dean.  My sense is that he is "in charge" but only in the sense that he is responsible for schedules and budgets.  He's middle aged (his two children are in their late 20s) and a widower. It's late at night and the Dean is having trouble falling asleep--it's one of those stormy evenings where it's hot, heavy and there is no breeze.  It feels like rain is on its way, but not coming fast enough.  The Dean is tossing and turning, trying to find the cool side of the pillow (as the kids say nowadays) thinking over the recent troubling events taking place in the close.  There has been a rash of unpleasant anonymous letters sent to various people in the close, all stating that Canon Appledown is over the hill, incompetent, past his prime, or, more embarrassing, accusing him of being lecherous (even though he's almost 80 and is in bed by 9 pm). On the one hand, the Dean doesn't take the letters seriously but, on the other, he is aware that they are creating a nasty mood within the close which fosters gossip, suspicions and accusations--and also scheming and morbid curiosity because no one actually likes Canon Appledown. And then the Dean realizes he feels real dread and panic and can't figure out why until he remembers that it was almost exactly three years ago that the universally beloved Canon Whyte fell off the ledge of the church tower, down onto the paving stones and made a real mess. Of course it was an accident as Whyte was no spring chicken but insisted that he needed to gallivant all over the upper spires to examine the architecture features and carved statues that date back to the 1400s.  Whyte was enthusiastic about the church's history and guided tourists up to extremely worrisome heights--so of course, Whyte must have just slipped and fell. The Dean assures himself that there is no reason to believe that anything untoward happened to him. Nonetheless...

Finally, the storm breaks, the rain lashes, the temperatures drop and the dean falls into a blissful sleep--only to be woken up by the groundskeeper stating, "You'd better come see this."  This time, it's a hateful message spray painted on the inside of the close wall. Well, this isn't going to quell the gossip.  And the dean has to admit that it's finally time to call in some experts as it seems pretty clear that this person isn't going to stop and things may get a lot worse before they get better.

Then, the dean has a brainwave: he remembers that his favorite sister is the parent of his favorite nibling (the current term for "niece and/or nephew"), Bobby, who is employed as an investigator at Scotland Yard!  The dean can simply invite young Bobby (who, to the dean's surprise, turns out to be a full grown man with job experience and good training) for a brief visit during which he can casually mention the problem.  Then, either Bobby will tell him not to worry or handle the whole matter.  

Young Bobby, hereafter referred to as Sergeant Pollack, agrees to stay for a weekend.  He doesn't think things are too terrible, but also that the letters should not be dismissed. He makes a map of the close and gets a list of its occupants and tries to puzzle out who has an axe to grind and the time to get 50 miles out of town to mail letters every other day.  At this point, the groundskeeper enters with another, "You'd better come see this." Only this time, it isn't rude graffiti but a dead body: Canon Appledown has been cracked on the back of the noggin and is dead as a doornail.

Well, that certainly changes things!  Pollack is invested but also aware that he has no authority. He calls up his supervisor, our intrepid Chief Inspector Hazlerigg (previously seen in Smallbone Deceased) and presents the lay of the land.  Hazlerigg is definitely interested in the idea of a small town murder over the big time crime he sees in London and agrees to head out to lead the case.  He also immediately sees that working with the local police will have real advantages as locals aren't going to tell anything to any fancy pants investigators from London Town. So after Hazlerigg and Pollack buy the defensive local chief of police a few pints, the chief thaws and actually gets excited about co-leading a murder case with Scotland Yard.  

The corpse is examined and we are told that (a) no woman is strong enough to have committed the deadly act (a bit artificial, but I'll overlook it) and (b) based on witness testimony, the murder had to have taken place between 8:00 pm and 8:05 pm.  Well, that should simplify matters.  The middle section of the book proceeds nicely: a lot of interviewing of all the people inside the close--all of whom are lying about something or other--and it quickly becomes clear that either no one committed the murder or everyone was in on it together and established alibis nestled inside of alibis for one another.  

Then, and this is probably the best part of the story, several elderly canons separately form their own opinions about whodunnit, and each decides to follow their suspects over hill and dale, all while trying to look inconspicuous.  Add in a dozen or so police officers tailing each of them, then mix in several  taxis drivers ordered to "Follow that car!!" and you have the perfect set up for great slap stick comedy---why hasn't this been turned into a movie, I ask?  

But, all good things must come to an end and our murderer gets panicky, perhaps feeling the long arm of the law and a bunch of nosy Canons getting to close for comfort, and another dead body appears--and this time, it's not an annoying old Canon that no one is sad to see go but a universally beloved character who was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time and, worse, didn't even know that what they knew was incriminating. I have mixed feelings about this ploy: on the one hand, it falls into the category of "nasty" and I don't like "cozy murder mysteries" getting nasty. On the other, it does provide the necessary impetus that the characters needed so they would stop with the cops and robbers amateur hour. And NOW, finally, they sheepishly admit their alibis were all lies intended to cover up silly indiscretions and tell the truth so the police can actually get on with their job. Not only do we have to throw out all our previous theories (because no one was where they said they were and no one actually saw anything they claimed to but they did see other things they didn't admit to seeing) and begin from scratch. And we find out that the Dean's uneasy late night worries were right: Canon Whyte's death was no accident. And we only discover the backstory of his death when two Canons who believe they dislike each other are forced to work together (and in so doing become fast friends) and unravel seriously complicated clues hidden in a homemade crossword puzzle Whyte created and hid inside a book for them to find "some time after he died". (And, yes, the crossword puzzle clues and grid are included in the book and if you are so inclined, you can work it out yourself ahead of the characters in the novel. I was reading this at 1 am last night and didn't have the energy, but it's a nifty plot device.)

This book is well worth the read.  I just hope whoever does seek out a copy finds a better looking one than the one I have.

Thursday, July 9, 2026

The Night of the Twelfth by Michael Gilbert

 

I thought I had read all the really good books written by Gilbert and was going to simply be working through his others because I am, as Simon always tells me, a "completist."  Surely there is no way he could write a better book than those I had already read.  But was I wrong!  

The Night of the Twelfth, published in 1976, is now out of print--which is so odd because it's amazingly well written.  I'm just repeating myself at this point but Gilbert really is a special sort of genius when it comes to writing breezy prose that is quickly paced while at the same time develops the story slowly and carefully. And despite the fact that there are 20-odd significant characters, they are very distinct individuals with their own voice.  

I don't want to give too much away as the story is too enjoyable to risk spoilers with an overly developed overview, but I can describe the basic idea: the story takes place in Surrey County which (in this world) is populated by a lot of tiny villages that are connected by many, many minor roads that weave between woods, quarries (like in Dr. Who) and farms. This geography is important as it means that a terrible person who is familiar with the landscape can find many places just off an empty road to do evil acts but then pop back into their car and evade capture by disappearing into a maze of windy roads. The evil deeds in question are kidnapping boys (preteens) while they walk home from after school events, bundling them up into the trunk of a car, driving to a nearby but well hidden drive or field, sadistically torturing them, and then leaving the dead body to be found (maybe) some time later.  This horrible scene plays out within the first few pages so we know we are in for seriously upsetting stuff right from the get go. But, despite the awful nature of the crimes taking place, the book does not descend into morbid horror the way so many more recently published mystery books do (looking at you, Jo Nesbo, who gives us nasty, horrible stories that make you want to take a hot soapy shower after reading).  Perhaps because of the quick pacing of the story and use of humor to develop all the various characters, it seems like the book is getting something importantly done rather than cynically belaboring cruelty.

Ok, enough about the crimes.  The story unfolds by taking us into two separate groups of people.  One is the police (local "constabularies", some of whom are smart and reliable and some doing time until their retirement kicks in next month) and undercover Scotland Yard investigators on loan to help out.  But even better than the usual plaster footprint casts and witness interviewing, we see an amazing net of assistants collected who report to the police to ensure they can catch the guilty party.  They are night owls (astronomers, insomniacs, 3rd shift workers getting home before dawn, bird watchers and so on) who take up posts at various important road intersections and remain on the look out for a specific make and model of car.  And it works! (As one inspector notes, once you tell someone you need their help catching someone who sadistically tortures a child, even hardened criminals step up and do their part.) So much more satisfying than AI generated reports scraped from flock cameras....

The other characters are all found at Trenchard House, a private school (smack dab in the middle of all the sites where murdered boys have been found) for boys from around 7 years old (they get to sleep with teddy bears) to until 14 or so (they are not allowed teddy bears). When we meet the teachers they are complaining that the few days they had off from teaching because of a serious lice infestation at the school was a far too brief break and they are debating the (dis)value of beating boys to maintain discipline. Some are strongly in favor because "back in their day" boys were beaten all the time and they turned out just fine.  Others are strongly opposed because beating "just creates fascists and don't we have enough of those in the world already?"  Good points on both sides but the issue is moot because the headmaster, Fairfax (nicknamed "Connie") by all the boys, prohibits all physical punishments. The rule carved in granite is that teachers can impose "demerits" and if the student gets two demerits in one day, they get sent to the headmaster's office and he gets to decide if whapping the kid with a stick is warranted. (It turns out it rarely is as imposing menial custodial tasks that prevent the kid from getting to do fun things after school hours is very effective at stopping obnoxious behaviors.)  As is expected, the teachers all get along well enough but do not actually like each other all that much, and each is vaguely suspicious that none of the others actually does their job all that well.  To underscore that point, one of the teachers, Mr. Morrison, just had a "nervous breakdown" and is "taking a break" (which seems to involve hiking in Switzerland and reading a lot of good books). And suddenly there are two new "teachers", both of whom have guns with silencers hidden in their bedrooms. How do we know this?  Because the oldest boys (there are only three of them and they share a bedroom which is on the highest floor of an old tower) spend every evening looking out their bedroom windows and spying on all the teachers as they sneak out after hours, one to get to a pub to get drunk, one to get to his "lady friend's house", one to "go walking," and another who "takes photos".  And it turns out that the two new guys spend at least three hours every night patrolling the borders of the school property. Very interesting.

We learn about the characters by popping in and out of every classroom, eavesdropping in on the conversations between the students and their teachers when the students don't want to work and ask ridiculous questions to derail the lessons. (Such as: "G.G. [nickname for carpentry teacher] is a real hero, right?"--a question that prompts their classics teacher to, yet again, angrily lecture on the Ancient Greek notion of "hero" as it contrasts with the "perverted notion of heroism" one sees everywhere in today's society as when football players are regarded as role models...He's not wrong.)  

As in all Gilbert's stories, we are allowed to do our detecting because we are privy to all the relevant conversations but we aren't able to actually solve the mystery (and so unable to avoid more horror) because our two secret police/teachers withhold vital clues from us. The question isn't who did it but how to prove it without risking another horrible murder. Fortunately we get the benefit of a wise psychologist (not the sort of "counselor" with an MA in "communications" that we all have to suffer these days) who tells us the true nature of sadism and the hidden motives of the sadist. It turns out this is no sexual pervert we are dealing with but someone who gets pleasure from making a vulnerable person cry. Really, really terrible and all too recognizable--which is, I believe, the point of the novel. Rather than give us a community of normal people within which a pervert desperately tries to stay hidden, we are provided a sea of minor sadists, each of whom for one reason or another, has a moment during which they would be really happy making this or that person suffer.  

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

The Notting Hill Mystery by Charles Warren Adams

Allegedly this is considered to be the very first detective book ever written--though I have heard that said of lots of books from all over the world. (Hello Di Gong An, the 18th century collection of stories based on Di Renjie, a county magistate of the Tang court who lived in the 7th century, which was translated into English by Robert van Gulik thereby giving us the amazing Judge Dee books which I discovered about a month after I moved to Arkansas because there is an really good bookstore in Little Rock with a truly excellent mystery section just inside the main entrance of the bookstore. I bought the first Judge Dee book solely on the basis of its cover design. While others recommend that you never judge a book by the cover, I usually do and it usually works out really well for me. So that just goes to show something.) ANYWAY, whether it's the first English detective book or not, The Notting Hill Mystery is very much NOT a "modern police procedural detective novel": the story (published some time during 1862 and 1863 as an eight-part serial in the magazine Once a Week) is a collection of depositions written by Mr. Henderson, a secretary for the Life Assurance Association, and letters and statements Henderson collected as part of his insurance fraud investigation report. And it relies on plot points that no modern mystery writer would get away with now.    

The impetus to Henderson's investigation is a claim--well, 5 claims, really--made by Baron R-- (one clue that this isn't a modern novel is that some people have their last names turned into an initial followed by a long dash) for five life insurance claims, each for £5000, for his wife who died mysteriously (horribly, painfully, after an unbelievably protracted series of undiagnosable and untreatable illnesses). Each policy was with a different company and only because these businesses work together did they realize that he had taken out so many policies on his wife just a year before she died.  

In the course of his investigation, Henderson quickly comes to the conclusion that Baron R-- killed his wife. So the question is not, did he do it, but HOW did he do it??  (The fact of the multiple life insurance policies certainly explains the why he did it....) But in order to answer that question, we need to go back more than 20 years, to the birth of Mrs. R---, which takes us to the London household of Lord and Lady Boleton who are dearly in love with one another.  Lady Boleton--an overly emotional, easily distressed sort of woman--is pregnant and her husband is off traveling to god-knows-where, and he should have returned ages ago, but hasn't.  She is certain something TERRIBLE has happened to him as she can "sense" it.  And, lo and behold, she is right--the news arrives that he has been killed by robbers (or some sort of collection of bad people while he traveled on the road) and, distraught, she runs out of the house in the middle of the night and collapses on the turf of some sretch of boggy land.  She is found hours later by servants who drag her back into the house where she goes into early labor and gives birth to two extremely tiny twin girls--and then conveniently she dies. So we are clear of the Boleton parents.

What happen to the girls?  Barely alive (but ridiculously rich), hanging by a thread, they are packed off to live with an elderly aunt who loves them, but is slightly out of her depth. One girl, Gertude, is fair haired and thin but relatively healthy, and the other, "poor Catherine", is "dark, gypsy-like" and sort of runty and sickly. Nonetheless, they adore each other and (it is said repeatedly) have a special way of non-verbally communicating--as if by telepathy. (Another clue that this isn't a modern mystery is the reliance on mental signals/messages to sustain the entire story--very much like a lesser Sir Arthur Conan Doyle story.)  Then, as if these girls haven't suffered enough, the aunt hires an idiotic and inattentive nursemiad who takes care of the girls each day for a few hours, which invloves daily walks to a nearby park.  And while paying attention to one and not the other, the "dark gypsy girl Catherine" disappears into thin air, never to be seen again.  Of course the obvious conclusion is that she was stolen by Gypsies. The police hassle all the gypsies they can find, but no Catherine is recovered. So, Getrude no longer has a twin and no longer has someone with whom she can secretly commune. And for the next 20 odd years vague illnesses beset Gertrude for no reason whatsoever--right as rain one second then at death's door the next. Very eerie!!

Nonetheless, Getrude grows up and marries a Mr. Anderton (stupid name) and they are desperately in love.  Apparently Mr. Anderton is the best husband possible, except in one respect: he is a mild-mannered man UNLESS SOMEONE IMPUNES HIS REPUTATION!  He can stand a lot but he cannot stand his good name being sullied. Of course insults do not cause him to have a temper, but instead to get melodramatic, despairing and suicidal.  Good thing Gertrude is also "sensitive" and is well-experienced in knowing how to talk someone off a ledge. Indeed, both spend a LOT of time talking each other off ledges.  Not a marriage that I would like, but it works for them.

So: these childless Andertons travel about England and Europe, resting and relaxing in various stately homes they rent for weeks on end, bringing various servants along with them.  All is wonderful except for those pesky mysterious bouts of illness that Getrude suffers from that no ordinary doctor seems to be able to treat.  (They all assume it is a form of "cholera" or "gastritus" and give her strong sedatives.)  After going to a "show" (the kind that Tin Tin and Captain Haddock go to to see sword swallowers and mind readers), Mr. Anderton decides that MESMERISM is the answer and he asks Baron R--- (yes, that Baron R!!) to come to his home and treat his wife.  This so-called "treatment" involves nothing more than Gertrude laying out on a divan/couch sort of thing with her eyes closed and the Baron sitting next to her, holding her hand.  He then sends "pulses of energy" into her to heal her--that's the "mesmerism".  And, amazingly, she is "cured" and feels fit as a fiddle after only a few minutes!  Initially, Mr. Anderton is so grateful he insists that the Baron visit every day for these "treatments". And, initially, Gertrude is also excited. But after some months (!) they both decide that there is something "unseemly" about the whole thing. So Mr. Anderton decides to end the treatments, insisting that Baron R-- leave and never return. Getrude suddenly decides that she "loathes" the Baron so intensely, she cannot stand to even have him in the house, let alone holding her hand while she lays back with her eyes closed.  (At this point, I really have no idea what happened--is something sexual taking place while he is holding her hand and sending "pulses" through her body?  Her husband is in the room durnig the treatmetns and the Baron isn't even talking to Gertrude--and she is certainly fully clothed.  I don't get it.)  Despite Mr. Anderton insisting, the Baron will not be put off and offers to "mesmerize" Gertrude "remotely": he has an "assistant" ("Madame R---) who does not speak. (Later we discover that she can speak English and she wants to speak English but isn't permitted if the Baron glares at her with his bulbous, unblinking eyes.)  So the Baron and Mr. Anderton go into the far corner of the room where it's dark (why?) and Madame R-- sits next to Gertrude and holds her hand. And--la!!!--the "mesmerism" works even better and Gertrude is suddenly so healthy, she can hardly stand it!

Ok, that's all weird but more importantly, where is this going? Well, there are a lot of mesmerism sessions, a lot of traveling about to various homes in various parts of England, Scotland and then Germany. The only thing of real significance during all this is that the Baron expertly pumps Mr. Anderton for information about Getrude's backstory and Mr. Anderton unwisely reveals that Getrude is a twin whose sister was stolen by gypsies. Seemingly a throwaway comment, it sends Baron into a state of shock so strong, his hands shake and he cataonically stares off into the middle distance for so long his cigar goes out!! 

From that point on, Baron R-- "travels around the continent" (though he is in fact seen gadding about in London by various witnesses who are later asked to write letters which make up this novel). And then , after a few weeks free of the Baron, everything goes to hell: Gertrude's bouts of illness get more frequent and more severe she can't eat, can't sleep, and has serious GI distress to the point that she literally wastes away. Mr. Anderton calls every doctor he can get a hold of and all are completely perplexed--each later testifies that the thought of poisoning certainly occured to them but (a) they can't figure out how it could be done since she hadn't eaten or drunk anything in weeks and (b) Mr. Anderton was at her side CONSTANTLY. Ok, Getrude is out of the picture. THEN here comes the Baron, who, while allegedly consoling Mr. Anderton, tells him that it sure looks to everyone like he killed his wife.  Well, Anderton can take the death of his wife but he cannot take insults to his reputation.  So he kills himself--using the handy bottle of poison the Baron left on Anderton's bedside table.

Ok, that's two deaths.  Where is this going?  It is all leading up to the mysterious death of Madame R--, the Baron's wife, the silent non-English speaking but actually English speaking woman who was so amazingly able to non-verbally communicate with Getrude.  And, yes, Madame R-- dies the exact same death that Getrude did--lots of vomiting, diarhea, cold sweats and sleeplessness for weeks on end until finally her heart gave out. And THAT'S when the Baron applied for payment on all those insurance claims and THAT'S why our intrepid Mr. Henderson the insurance secretary got busy interviewing doctors and servants and neighbors. He quickly comes to these conclusions: (1) Madame R is the long lost "dark gypsy-like" Catherine, Getrude's sickly twin; (2) the Baron discovered the fact of the vast wealth that Getrude inherited from her overly emotional parents; (3) in order to get that wealth (plus the 5 insurance payouts as 5 cherries on 5 sundaes), the Baron had to (a) marry Catherine which required buying her from her circus manager--don't even ask, we can't get into all the weirdness here; (b) kill Getrude; (c) kill Mr. Anderson; (d) kill Madame R/Catherine--in that order!!!; (e) have proof of the identies of the twins and sit back while the money rolls in as the only living heir to the Boleton fortune.

Well!  As said above, this is not a modern murder mystery where police sergeants slowly and ploddingly collect plaster casts of footprints, hairs from fabrics and various witness statements but is far more like a Wilkie Collins laudenum-induced fever dream--which means it's interesting, but not exactly intellectually satisfying.  And I just can't get past the whole "mesmerism" angle which has to be real, because this "remotely induced sickness" is how the Baron killed his three victims.  Even if we buy it, would any court buy it?  Or is Baron R-- going to literally get away with murder?

Sunday, July 5, 2026

Film review: Memories of Murder (2003)


This is the second ever film by Bong Joon Ho, South Korean director of Parasite (and to a lesser extent, Mickey 17).  I've been meaning to watch it for a while, and when Jami suggested it as a way to avoid watching some sci fi flick I'd suggested, I readily agreed.  I think I hadn't watched it because it has kind of a gloomy reputation (just looking at that poster above should give you a hint), and while it's about a horrific topic (it's based on a real story of a serial killer who targeted women and defiled their bodies), and it certainly doesn't try to lessen the horror, its frank portrayal of some of the rank amateurism (not to mention outright abuse) of the cops involved leads to some laugh-out-loud moments.  Putatively our protagonist, to whom we are introduced right at the outset, is Detective Park Doo-man, played by chubby-faced Ho stalwart Song Kang-ho (although in body he's quite slender in this one).  He has been called to the site of the first corpse, found in a covered drainage ditch out in the fields.  (The whole film is set in rural South Korea, and the actual murders were the firsts murders in that part of the country.)  The place is swarming with kids, whom he has to shoo away, particularly as they discover the woman's underclothes nearby and start playing with them.  In fact, disturbance of the crime scene by hicks and gawkers is a running theme - at the site of the second corpse, a tractor runs over the only footprint on the scene.  Park has a thuggish sidekick, Detective Cho Yong-koo, whose job it is to beat suspects until they confess, one he clearly relishes (until one of them later fights back, to maiming effect).  


They are shortly joined by a competent Seoul detective Seo Tae-yoon, 


who, while clearly contemptuous of their methods, makes no attempt to intervene, but just tells them as they cart the suspect off that he's not the one.  An early suspect is the mentally disabled adult son of the local tavern owner (where they often hang out, eating meat and drinking beer), whom they bully and abuse into confessing, 


and take him out to the site of the murders to re-enact them.  


He does reveal some facts that he shouldn't know, but he also has a bodily quirk that absolves him.  Their second main suspect is the cause of one of the laughest-out-loudest moments in the film, when the two hick cops are at the scene of the latest murder with a kind of magic they've bought from a shaman (seriously - it's very hard to respect them) when they see the city cop coming and hide, and then he sees somebody coming and he hides, and it turns out to be our suspect.  So we have three groups, with only our thuggish pair aware of all of them.  And then Cho steps on a twig...

Anyway, suffice to say that, while he also confesses after abuse, he is not their man.  It takes an observation from the one female cop on the force 


to help them track down their most promising suspect, one who will test Seo's resolve to do things the right way.  


There is also a great older boss whose exasperated reactions to the bickering, especially between Park and Seo (their relationship got off to a bad start when Seo, clearly dropped off near town approaches a woman to get directions, at which she screams, runs, falls down a hill and he's helping her up when Park drives by and thinks he's attacking her and attacks him) provides comic relief.  There's also a girl's school, and two schoolgirls in particular who both help and hinder them.  And lots of shots of rain (the murders all take place in the rain), and one scene in particular that is blood-chilling, as we see a victim stalked and caught.


Overall, it's truly an excellent film.  I thought Zodiac was amazing, but having seen this earlier film, I can't help but think that it was hugely influential on that one.  Apart from the killer, everyone in this film is so normal and alive and fallible that it just brings everything home.  I'd even rate it higher than Parasite, but that might be recency bias.  The penultimate scene teeters on the edge of melodrama 



(and is the only time in the film where there's any intrusive music), but the film saves it with a very affecting coda/bookend (which fits with the film title).  


See it if you have any affinity for police procedurals, as it's an all-timer.  The two hours fly by and you realize that you've been holding your breath for most of it.

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Too Darn Hot

 We will not be attending the fair in a tiny baking hot square of asphalt in downtown Flint, although no doubt it will be better attended than Trump's fair.  We'll go swim in a lake instead.


 





Monday, June 29, 2026

Death in High Heels by Christianna Brand

 

I didn't even know this book existed until I got it a few weeks ago as part of that book club.  It is Brand's first novel, published in 1941 and written during her evenings while she worked at the very sort of store as is featured in this story.  It's a West End "boutique" called Christophe et Cie where mannequins (again with the mannequins) model fancy new designs by Mr. Cecil, an extremely camp man who is constantly having intense fights with various "boy friends" and then spending weekends crying with his mother. (The fight that gets caught up in our murder mystery results after Cecil's boyfriend tells him he's fallen for one of the women who works with Cecil--and she is the very woman who ends up dead.) Brand seems to know that this stereotype of gay men is a bit over the top as several characters comment on how ridiculously stereotypical he is.  The owner of the store, Mr. Bevan, has similar relationship problems with women: he sees random young ladies out and about and invites them home with his to look at his etchings and next thing you know, they are working at the store, either modeling, sales, or running errands around the store, up and down stairs to take people things or deliver messages.

Brand said in an interview that she HATED that job and HATED all the people she worked with, and she spent her free moments fantasizing about murdering her workmates--and thus her first murder mystery was born! As is usual for Brand, the murder occurs very early on in the story--just a few pages in and Miss Doon (Bevan's right hand who helps him run the business) dies an extremely painful death from poisoning by oxalic acid.  It is quickly determined that she had to have ingested the poison during the lunch she ate while at work. Necessary backstory on lunches at Christophe et Cie:  Bevan realized that he can pay his workers less and make them work more if he (a) keeps them on site during the lunch "hour" (which is actually only about 15 minutes) and (b) if he has served up a "hot meal" each day.  That way, they can be paid less as they won't have to buy their own lunches each day.  The fact that he is a rotter and a cad is mentioned by every character all through the novel. He doesn't even deny it! In the aftermath of the murder, his only concern is whether negative press will harm his business.  When he discovers that, in fact, it results in the store being overwhelmed with new customers--women who want to goggle at the scene of the crime and tell their friends that their new dress came from the place where that woman was poisoned!!--he is ecstatic!  

The list of suspects is limited to those sharing that same lunch or in a nearby room. This includes: Bevan and Cecil, Miss Gregory (Bevan's left hand, who takes care of the business/financial side of things), "Macaroni" (Bevan's secretary--her real name is McEney but the nickname Macaroni was given to her by her friends at work and the name stuck), three shopgirls: Irene, Rachel, and Victoria, two mannequins: Judy and Aileen, and Mrs. 'Arris, the peevish cleaning lady who selectively pretends to be hard of hearing so she can eavedrop on the gossipy conversations among the various young ladies.

And as always with Brand's stories, she manages to deliver a mystery that is both impossible and also too easy to solve.  On the one hand, every single person has reason to poison Doon and everyone knew of the poison, saw it, and could have gotten some. On the other, it is (seemingly) literally physically impossible for any of them to have done it as they are either not in the room at the time the poison had to have been added to Doon's food OR they are in line of sight of at least two others who would have seen if they had added the poison to the food.  And, as always with Brand, every one of the characters has secrets that they are terribly ashamed of that they want to hide which causes them to withold evidence or lie about evidence, making the investigation all that much more impossible to solve.  

And who is our intrepid investigators from Scotland Yard?  Inspector Charlesworth is in charge and has Seargeant Bedd as his right hand man. Charlesworth is very young (his elders laugh at him behind his back) as he is perpetually falling in love and then three weeks later when the relationships explode, he is moping around work, despairing at the pointlessness of existence. [Another novel that features him is The Rose in Darkness, which I have not read and is, as far as I can tell, out of print.] Nonetheless, his chief takes a chance on him and throws Charlesworth into a dress shop full of lovely young ladies.  And the inevitable occurs: each one he meets he's more in love with than the last.  He's particularly smitten with Miss Victoria. The only problem is she is happily married and finds him rather silly.  And he is silly when it comes to love but very serious when it comes to solving the murder. Sergeant Bedd, who says he prefers women with a "bit o' meat on them", isn't so easily distracted and very competently runs around gathering information from various porters and chemists who sell oxalic acid (which, it seems, is very easy to get).  

After several days of getting nowhere Charlesworth's chief assigns Inspector Smithers (who is  loathesome and smug and only too happy to see a pretty young lady hung for murder) as Charlesworth's "assistant". Smithers has no creative intelligence and no capacity to see beneath the surface and sets out to make an arrest--a wrongful arrest, Charlesworth is certain.  Fortunately, their flaming row is just the impetus Charlesworth needs to turn his perspective upside down and get the brilliant flash of insight he needs to solve the case--just SECONDS before the murderer strikes again...

The best part of reading Brand's books is her development of female characters: their conversations, inner dialogs, and her attention to how they think about their bodies, how they attend to their hair, make-up, fit of their gloves and so on. She makes sure we really do understand what each is doing and feeling and thinking when we are hearing the events from their point of view. And here she gives us seven distinctive women, all with (what they believe to be) terrible secrets, a few worth being killed for and a few willing to be accused of murder for. That makes all of them extremely dangerous and interesting, and allows Brand to demonstrate her skill for writing a fast paced yet satisfying story.  In comparison to her others, it is a "first effort" but I would be extremely please if I wrote this after a long day of working with people I hated.