#1440: Jack on the Gallows Tree (1960) by Leo Bruce


Recovering from a bout of jaundice, History master Carolus Deene is sent by his headmaster to sleepy Buddington, “famous for its population of rich and aged invalids” and the fact that “[t]here, alone in all England, the bath-chair survives as more than a relic”. There it is hoped that Deene will refrain from “jeopardizing the fair name of the Queen’s School by embroiling [him]self in detective work of a nature likely to result in unfortunate publicity”. Alas, immediately prior to his arrival, two elderly women are found strangled to death on the same night, the arrangement of their bodies suggesting some link. And Deene’s reputation precedes him to the point that he finds himself investigating almost against his will.

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#1437: Murder Will Speak, a.k.a. For Murder Will Speak (1938) by J.J. Connington


I’m pretty sure that I’d rather, in the 24 novels of crime and detection Alfred Walter Stewart wrote as J.J. Connington, he took a few risks and so remained curious, but that doesn’t mean I’m always going to like what he wrote. And so to Murder Will Speak, a.k.a. For Murder Will Speak (1938), the thirteenth novel to feature Chief Constable Sir Clinton Driffield, and one that takes a slightly sideways steps in its telling which, while not always successful, at least fails in some interesting ways. Connington’s other experiments — The Eye in the Museum (1929), Gold Brick Island (1933), The Brandon Case (1934) — were certainly harder to read than this, and with a few pages chopped out this might have been more successful.

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#1434: The Scarlet Circle (1943) by Jonathan Stagge


For reasons beyond finding Puzzle for Fools (1936) merely okay, I’ve never quite been able to summon much enthusiasm for investigating the work of Jonathan Stagge/Patrick Quentin/Q. Patrick/etc. Maybe it’s all the pseudonyms, maybe it’s the fact that the names seem to hide an army of collaborators, maybe it’s their general unavailability…maybe it’s a combination of all of that. But The Scarlet Circle (1943) came recommended by someone (apologies, I get a lot of book recommendations) and, being newly minted in the American Mystery Classics range, there was no reason not to check it out. And, having read it, I’m still unenthusiastic about these guys, just now with more evidence.

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#1432: A Little Help for My Friends – Finding a Modern Locked Room Mystery for TomCat Attempt #31: Midnight and Blue (2024) by Ian Rankin

I’ve written before about my experience with the DI John Rebus books by Ian Rankin, a series my changing tastes saw me vacate somewhere in the early 2000s, having read about fifteen of them. Well, I recently discovered that twenty-fifth entry Midnight and Blue (2024) contains an impossible crime, so let’s saddle up one more time and see how things play out. Purely for TomCat‘s benefit, you understand.

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#1431: The Clock House Murders (1991) by Yukito Ayatsuji [trans. Ho-Ling Wong 2025]


I haven’t loved these annual translations of the Bizarre House Mysteries series by Yukito Ayatsuji, but there can be no denying that they’re written with the precepts of the puzzle mystery — maximum confuse, maximum unlikely, maximum invention — front and centre, and as a puzzle-head myself I’d be a stick in the mud to not want to dive in to each new book. And The Clock House Murders (1991), newly translated by Ho-Ling Wong, might well be the most successful entry since opener The Decagon House Murders (1987), using its setting superbly in a way that I’m not sure the other books did and turning on a trick so ingenious that you can’t help but be impressed.

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