#1416: How Weary, Stale, Flat and Unprofitable – Crime Fiction Clichés from The Mystery Writer’s Handbook (1956) ed. Herbert Brean

Being something of a fan of the mystery writer Herbert Brean, I am ever on the lookout for work by him, especially the short stories ‘Murder Buys a Ticket’, a.k.a. ‘Nine Hours Late on the Opening Run’ (1941) and ‘The Man Who Talked with Spirits’ (1943) listed in Adey. In these searches, I recently discovered that Brean acted as editor for The Mystery Writer’s Handbook (1956), in which members of the Mystery Writers of America (MWA) provided advice for people looking to write “detective, suspense, mystery, and crime stories”.

Some of the names involved will be familiar to Golden Age fans — Anthony Boucher, Fredric Brown, John Dickson Carr, John Creasey, Dorothy Salisbury Davis, Stanley Ellin, Anthony Gilbert, Stuart Palmer, Rex Stout — while others probably haven’t even heard of themselves. And, of course, we’re past the Golden Age, and so while many of the ideas discussed herein are interesting, the puzzle plot is not high on anyone’s agenda. It will surprise no-one that some of the tenets of the Golden Age are espoused by writers who worked in the Golden Age, like Stuart Palmer saying…

Play fair. If they guess it, I mean the intelligent readers, they’ll still like you for playing fair and not cheating, any time, anywhere. No twins, no butlers who turn out to be the master’s long-lost brother.

…or Lawrence Treat coming out in favour of the impossible crime…

State the impossible occurrence, and then try to explain it.

…but my interest here lies in what is said about the state of writing after the Golden Age. Brean introduces this by saying “[C]areless workmanship has resulted in a whole series of mystery story clichés, and that if you want to avoid repeating them you might like to be reminded of what they are. So we asked for suggestions from the membership of the MWA, and here are the nominations, for your edification, amusement — and proper warning” and then provides the following list, presumably acquired by submissions from the various contributors to the volume (the numbering is mine, for easy reference later, but the order and contents are unchanged):

  1. The twin-brother alibi — contemptible!
  2. The use of some too-familiar terms, like “private eye,” “sleuth” and “mastermind.”
  3. “I had a hunch…”
  4. “The kill-light in his eyes…”
  5. “Her breasts were twin peaks…”
  6. “We will reconstruct the crime.”
  7. “The dead eyes stared…”
  8. “He barked” or “He rasped.”
  9. Had I but known.
  10. Beds.
  11. Titles that are fine-sounding but have not the remotest relation to the story.
  12. The city controlled by Mr. Big.
  13. The night-club background.
  14. The medical examiner who takes a quick glance at a corpse and, without an autopsy, states the time and cause of death.
  15. The devastating beauty and sexiness of every female character in the story.
  16. Innocent people deliberately keeping information from the police for no sensible reason.
  17. The extraordinarily quick recovery of those who have been manhandled or otherwise seriously injured.
  18. The clear thinking of detectives who have just consumed enough liquor to pickle their brains for all time.
  19. The heroines whose occupations are never known, but who seem to have days and nights free and to live well into the bargain.
  20. The Helpful Criminal: “All right,” he snarled, “you’ve got the goods on me, but you’ll never take me alive.” There was a crash of glass, and then he was gone — to his death. (Nobody had the goods on this boy; a good lawyer would have made the detective — and writer — look silly. So the criminal helps everybody by the uncalled-for confession.)
  21. The mention of “clues.”
  22. The tough, sadistic cop.
  23. The client who puts cash on the desk of the private eye.
  24. The clue based on special knowledge (but I knew, of course, all along, that tansafrans luberitum burst into flame at 44 degrees centigrade).
  25. The Wench Dunit. I am so damned tired of reading rewrites of the last scene of The Maltese Falcon.
  26. The second (and third and ad infinitum) murder of the Man Who Knows Too Much. Second and third murders should be as carefully and personally motivated as the first.
  27. Great Aunt Lisa who calls all her heirs together to tell them she’s going to change her will but not till tomorrow so there’s lots of time to kill her tonight.
  28. The hero who gets slugged from behind a door in almost every chapter.
“Hang on…”

Yes, we’ll get to that in a minute. Let’s go over some of the sensible ones first.

This being a collection of American authors, it’s unsurprising that so many of the tropes derided herein feel like conventions from American crime fiction: #2, 3, 4, 5, 12, 13, 18, 19, 20, 22, 23, 25, and 28 — nearly half the list — seem to be a response to the Noirish tendencies that sprung from the imitators of Dashiell Hammett (and I include Raymond Chandler among them, come at me). If anything, it feels like the stirring of the relatively sparse embers of the American Private Eye novel was leaving people with a chill, and, having never had a great deal of love for that style of book, I can understand why.

There’s a sense, too, of the characters needing to be more than just ciphers or — in the case of the women — vamps: #5, 15, 19, and 25 asking that we perhaps treat our fictional females a little more kindly in these more enlightened days. It’s true that many authors — A.A. Fair, say — traded heavily on the licentious attraction of the women in their plots, but even Fair would, at times, allow a little more life to these sex objects by imbuing their circumstances with some human considerations. But, yes, the Female-Shaped Sex Trophy the Man Wins at the End was clearly wearing thin, even if it was about to be taken up by the movies in a big way.

Some of these, however, really baffle me.

“Yeah, like…”

American crime fiction was generally less concerned than its British cousin with fair-play clewing — this must surely be why people go so gah-gah for Ellery Queen, one of the few classic-era American writers to include more than three clues in their books on a regular basis — but #21 seems a trifle harsh to me. Surely there’s a difference between the conventions that comprise a genre — a crime, an investigation, the investigation of that crime founded on some sense of reasoning and intelligence, even if the detective is drunk half the time and battered unconscious the other half — and the disdainful rejection of clues as a tiresome trammelling that the genre needs to break away from. But, then, this is 1956, and the crime thriller was leaning more heavily into the second half of the sobriquet, and clearly someone was tired of being expected to apply any sort of reasoning to their slug-fests.

I’ll agree that #16 is a frustration, though often the recourse of the bad writer seeking to extend a thin plot, and I can understand people getting tired of #27 even if it is one of the great classic setups for a closed-circle murder mystery. But, equally, I have nothing against #26 — a killer who kills again purely because someone sees something or comes to an understanding of the crime that might reveal their identity is, for my money, a perfectly valid way for a novel to add intrigue…always providing, of course, that the reader it kept in the loop of that character’s actions and is able to deduce at the time of the death what that person might have known (the skill, of course, is in keeping this from the reader).

I also have no issue with #24, again provided that the information is shared fairly with the reader (some of these complaint do feel like authors whingeing: “But that’s, like, really haaaaard.”). For a great example of this, see The Problem of the Green Capsule (1939) by John Dickson Carr — knowledge well and truly lost to history, perfectly maintained in the amber of good telling and intelligent clewing. Yes, bad examples exist, but one person being bad at a thing doesn’t mean we banish that thing forever.

What, though, of #10?

“Finally!”

Beds? Beds?! Am I reading that right? Assuming the members of the MWA don’t have a problem with novels set in the historic county of Bedfordshire, precisely how did the spongy thing you sleep on become a tiresome cliché by 1956? A conveniently-placed bed for the drunk, concussed hero to fall into with the breastily-described, unemployed, sexually-charged heroine, yes, I can understand that becoming tiresome or feeling outmoded. But what do beds have to do with crime fiction? And, more importantly, which MWA member is venting their insomnia-fuelled frustrations here?

Your thoughts, as ever, are appreciated…

10 thoughts on “#1416: How Weary, Stale, Flat and Unprofitable – Crime Fiction Clichés from The Mystery Writer’s Handbook (1956) ed. Herbert Brean

  1. When I first read this book, and that essay, back around 1976, I remember how back in the mists of time of time they seemed. Still, given the even sadder state of GAD appreciation those twenty years on, its few still-glowing embers of that glory were something to warm a new aficionado. And when I recently went back to it, I had nearly identical reactions to you. “Beds” has to be one of my favorite responses to any survey question ever. Apart from  wondering about a possibly well-pickled author, it put me in mind of cash or stolen goods laid out on a motel bedspread. In any case, hard to beat a four-letter answer for brevity!

    Like

    • I want to find another such list written twenty years later, to see what people were tired of in the 1970s. And I thoroughly suspect that any list written by crime fiction authors now would make fascinating reading. If I had the contacts, I’d be tempted to try and amass some responses from the current crop of bestsellers to see what they made of things.

      Like

  2. A lot of these are specifically problems of their era. Either they’ve fallen out of fashion, or they wouldn’t fly today for reasons that have nothing to do with cliché. And as always, a good writer can pull off almost anything.

    I disagree with #6. I’m a sucker for a reconstruction scene. There’s something deeply satisfying about the detective lining everyone up and walking them back through the crime, giving the reader an entirely new view..

    On #16, the word “sensible” is doing a lot of work. What’s sensible to one reader isn’t to another. People keep things from the police for pride, fear, embarrassment, misplaced loyalty — all kinds of reasons. That’s not automatically ridiculous. And sometimes, frankly, if the police can’t know something because the plot needs them not to, they won’t know it.

    #20 is fascinating to me. The amount of evidence needed to convict someone in real life is miles away from what literary detectives often operate on. In fiction, the evidence can be thin and flimsy, but that’s what makes it dramatic. “There was one detail that fixed the killer in my mind.” In a courtroom, that might get laughed out of the building. In a novel, it can be electric.

    As for #21 — the “mention of clues” — I’m honestly not sure what’s being objected to. If it means the detective explicitly identifying something as a clue (“He found a thread and pocketed it”), then maybe the argument is that clues should be planted quietly and left for the reader to spot. But otherwise, I’m struggling to see the point.

    Number 26 is just plain stupid for the exact reasons you mention. Number 27 also. I agree with your reasoning, but I’d like to add that this is mostly used as a red herring these days.

    #28 I mostly associate with those 1920s mysteries that drift into adventure territory. Though I remember one Carr novel where I got genuinely excited because I thought he’d killed the protagonist halfway through — only to discover the character had been conveniently knocked out. You’ll never get the realistic version where the detective wakes up with brain damage and impaired motor function. Now that would take a skillful writer.

    Like

    • I forgot to mention about the reconstruction of the crime, so thanks for reminding me.

      At times it can be tedious, but sometimes — Agatha Christie’s Sparkling Cyanide, for instance — it turns into a wonderful plot point with an amazing exclamation point at the end. I love that setup of expectation being confounded by a development which upends what was expected, and recreations can provide that opportunity superbly.

      Like

    • Actually, that’s a common misconception; I contacted the spirit of Herbert Brean via a ouija board last night and he said it should be “No-one ever changes their bedsheets”.

      Liked by 1 person

    • Now that makes sense in a number of stories. Even the dumbest criminal should realize they leave prints in soft earth. And if there’s a notch in their sole or a peculiar tread on the bottom of their trainers, well, they deserve to be caught.

      Like

  3. Like all lists of rules, it’s a mix of sensible advice, stuff that’s been overdone at that moment, and pet peeves. You can sense a certain dissatisfaction with the British Golden Age style, and with pulpy hardboiled. The real overarching rule for all lists like this is “have a better reason for including this than ‘books like this always have this kind of scene'”. And that some things really are too cliched to be included even with a good reason.

    Anyway…

    Imagine if the Great Detective intones “We will reconstruct the crime,” then reaches for a box of legos. I’d read that.

    Like

  4. #10 thoroughly befuddles me. Still before noon here, so perhaps that’s only to be expected.

    #17 I can heartily endorse. These heroes who can survive severe beatings only to be up and ready for another in 24 hours are tiresome.

    #27 sets up a predictable scenario that can still be full of surprises, although I understand why some would like to give it a well-deserved rest.

    I don’t understand why #26 is a problem. Someone who knows too much and is positioned to reveal the killer is an excellent candidate for a second or third murder.

    The rest of the list I suspect relies on the view of the beholder.

    Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.