I’d like to get a fundamental contention out of the way: T.H. White’s sole detective novel Darkness at Pemberley came to my attention for the locked room murder that opens it, but I don’t feel it qualifies an impossible crime (the room can be unlocked at will, for one…). Had White made a couple of different narrative choices — not even in the scheme itself, purely in the structure of how he presents the problem — then it could be an ‘impossible alibi’ problem. But he doesn’t. You’re told the guilty party before they’ve had a chance to really fall under suspicion or even mention the alibi they’ve given themself, and so you have a well-that-would-have-been-impossible-if-they’d-been-given-a-chance-to-deny-it crime. Which I’m pretty sure is a new sub-sub-genre, though perhaps not one that we’ll get many further books in…
Anyhoo. Two dead bodies are found in separate buildings directly opposite each other: one a boarding house, the other a Cambridge college. After very little in the way of investigation or suspects, Inspector Buller — by turns peremptorily perceptive and dangerously dense — confronts the person he considers guilty, accuses them, admits that he has no evidence to prove their guilt and they confess and lay the entire scheme out for him. Then (and this is the bit that really defies belief) they tell him they’ve killed someone else and, without stopping to arrest them or arrange a constable to watch them, Buller races off to confirm this…and then that bit of the plot ends.
It sounds stupid because it is stupid, but it’s not like White isn’t trying as at times it is quite wonderfully written:
“It’s extraordinary how remote human beings are from on another. We go here and there like cats, meeting, fraternising, diverging. Sometimes we have alibis and sometimes not, but always, inside, everybody is incalculable and secret, always locked up an impenetrably alone. The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked.”
“You ought to have been a poet,” said the doctor.
“Not nowadays,” replied the Inspector, and shook his head.
Thanks for the shout out – looks like I had a better time with it than you – White certainly did better elsewhere 😆
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Same here. I read this one some years ago and the details have blurred a bit, but I do remember enjoying the book. I dimly recall liking the second part of the story better than the first one. But, yes, not an undisputed and genre-defining classic.
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For the bits of the second part confined to the house, it’s a very good, tough, thrillerish read; the car chase, while doubtless exciting at the time, has unfortunately dated horribly!
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It’s not a complete loss, and given another two books I think he might have nailed this form of story, but clearly not where his heart lay. Given the abominations I’ve read in the genre (couchGaldysMitchellcough) he’s hardly disgraced himself 🙂
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It has been a while since I read it but I thought it was full of welcome surprises and youthful energy – the second half is certainly what sticks in the mind.
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Hmm seems like you have taken a bullet for us there. Don’t think I am going to be rushing out to buy this one!
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It’s not quite a bullet-taker, but, yeah, a book one can afford to miss. Too much great stuff out there to discover first…
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Odd use of the name Pemberley when it’s got nothing to do with Pride & Prejudice. And I’ll echo Kate 0 thanks for taking the hit with this one.
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Maybe there are subtleties lost to my cro-magnon mind, but there seems to be no Austen link at all (aside from a lady with a fluttering bosom who always gets overheated around a moody man, that is). Definitely an odd choice of name, as it’s not even some updating of the concepts involved in P&P.
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Well, it sounds absolutely awful, but you have a gentle way with snark that made it absolutely worth the read. (Erm, you reading it, not me.) I look forward to your review of the Berkeley. And thanks for re-tweeting my piece. I don’t seem to be capable of setting up a Twitter account. So frustrating . . .
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Far from awful, just…underwhelming for me (but those other two reviews enjoyed it much more…so by sheer weight of numbers I’m out-voted).
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After resigning from Police, Buller goes to meet his friend Charles Darcy who lives in Pemberley mansion with his sister Elizabeth.
It is mentioned in the book while referring to Elizabeth that “the Christian name had been in the family since the famous Elizabeth in 1813”.
Thus it is clear that Charles and Elizabeth Darcy are descendants of Fitzwilliam Darcy and Elizabeth of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. Charles Darcy is the present Baronet.
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There’s a chance I may have skipped over that bit, as I don’t remember it at all…
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And, yes, I agree that it is a book one can afford to miss.
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I agree with Santosh – I got the impression that the characters were descendants of the main characters of ‘Pride and Prejudice’. As such I got confused with Elizabeth being Darcy’s sister (!!) until the link with Austen’s novel became clear.
I think I might have mentioned that I had strong feelings for this one… I think I liked the first third better than the rest of the novel – and when it all came together it felt as if it tried to do more than it actually accomplished.
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Meanwhile, I’m looking forward to your next review, as it’s meant to be one of Anthony Berkeley’s best novels, after ‘Poisoned Chocolates’ and ‘Jumping Jenny’ – but it has received mixed reviews. I failed to purchase it prior to Langtail Press removing it from the Kindle store. 😦
Incidentally, I’ve just finished (in a matter of minutes) the novel you wish to erase from Berkeley’s oeuvre: ‘Not to be Taken’.
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Yeah, Langtail just kinda up and disapeared, didn’t they? Here’s hoping we all get a chance to hoover up Murder Room titles before they do the same!
How did you like NtbT?
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Talking about hoovering up Murder Room titles… I’ve just purchased a handful of Conningtons, one Cullingford and one Wade. Which make my metaphorical TBR pile in my Kindle even higher. 😀
I think I felt more sympathetic towards ‘Not to be Taken’ than you did. After ‘Poisoned Chocolate Case’, which I liked very much, I read ‘Murder at the Basement’ and ‘Murder at Piccadilly’ – and neither struck me to have a particularly strong puzzle. I would say ‘Not to be Taken’ has a better mystery than both novels, but is a less entertaining read? None of the three, however, quite reach the heights of ‘Poisoned Chocolates Case’. I still have ‘Jumping Jenny’ on my shelf, so I hope I’ve saved the best for the last!
P.S. I’m starting to see a pattern in my differing responses to your and Kate’s reviews. Kate often reviews the books I’m currently thinking about, and are available for me to purchase. Your reviews often cast favourable light on books I once considered purchasing, but have slipped through my fingers (‘Death in Five Boxes’, ‘Second Shot’, etc.). 😛
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Ha, maybe I should let you know my future intentions so you have time to buy the books before they disappear. Only problem there is that I often don’t know what I’ll be writing about next myself most of the time…
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