Friday means Friday’s Forgotten Books hosted by
Pattie Abbott here. This week we have something different for you. You may have
seen the double take reviews that Barry and I have done where we each review
the same book. This week for FFB Patrick Ohl and Barry Ergang do the same thing
with THE GREAT MERLINI: The
Complete Stories of the Magician Detective by Clayton Rawson. Their takes on the book are different with
Patrick going first below……
Clayton Rawson is a pretty
well-known name from the Golden Age of Detective Fiction. A magician and a
great friend of John Dickson Carr’s, Rawson gave us one of the all-time great
debuts of detective fiction when he invented his detective, The Great Merlini,
and took him on a wild journey as Merlini had to solve the mystery of Death from a Top Hat, a complex affair
involving multiple impossibilities that The Great Merlini explains rationally.
Not only is it a great debut, I consider it one of the greatest detective
novels of all-time. Rawson followed that classic up with three further novels
and a series of short stories. But darn it all, those short stories are so hard
to find!
But then, last year, while browsing
my Facebook account, I suddenly noticed an update from MysteriousPress.com! I
gasped and made sure I was reading it right. Clayton Rawson was back in print!
All his novels have been resurrected into e-books, but that wasn’t enough for
the folks at MysteriousPress.com. By some miracle worthy of The Great Merlini
himself, they managed to reprint Rawson’s Don Diavolo stories… as well as all the short stories starring The Great
Merlini! And thus, I instantly went to Amazon and purchased three books, one of
which is entitled The Great Merlini: The
Complete Stories of the Magician Detective.
Would Clayton Rawson be able to
match the ingenuity of Death from a Top
Hat? Were these stories really worthwhile? How would The Great Merlini
handle the impossible disappearance of a person from a phone booth, a challenge
that the great John Dickson Carr failed miserably (in Scotland Yard’s Christmas)? What about those short-short stories?
Reader, I present you my critiques of all the stories found in this brand new
e-book:
A round of short-short stories: The
Clue of the Tattoed Man/The Clue of
the Broken Legs/The Clue of the
Missing Motive
Three short-short stories open the
collection, and these are so short
that I do not want to describe them in detail for fear that I will spoil
anything. These were originally contests that readers of EQMM were encouraged
to solve. Although none of them are bad stories, they do have an Encyclopedia
Brown sort of feel to them: a single word out of place could constitute the clue
that gives you the solution. It’s not quite what I’d expect from Rawson. The
neatest of these three is The Clue of the
Missing Motive, although The Clue of
the Broken Legs has a nice trick to it as well.
From Another World
John Dickson Carr and Clayton Rawson
challenged each other to solve a puzzle: how could a murderer strike his victim
when the latter was inside a room that was sealed with tape? Carr’s solution to
the riddle is found in He Wouldn’t Kill
Patience—one of his best books and one of his neatest solutions—and this is
Rawson’s own variation. Andrew Drake, a rich man with a newfound obsession with
ESP, is found dead in a room sealed with tape. The conditions were set up in
order to make sure nobody could tamper with the results of an experiment—but
the fellow really should have known better than to lock himself into a room in
such a bizarre way.
This is quite simply one of the
greatest short stories of all-time. The impossible crime is brilliantly worked
out: the deception that makes the whole thing work has an idea of brilliant
simplicity at its core. To top all this, the story is laced with a wonderful
sense of humour that makes it such a joy to read: every single word is a
delight. I envy those who will be reading it for the first time.
Off the Face of the Earth
Bela Zyzyk claims to be an alien,
but his appearance seems quite ordinary. But there are some unsettling things
about him: no relatives can be traced anywhere, and his gift of clairvoyance
seems genuine! But judge for yourself: he tells a chorus girl, Dorothy Arnold,
that she will disappear within a week, and even gives her the precise time as
4:20 PM. One day, Dorothy walks out of her house… and is seen for the last time
at 4:18.
Inspector Homer Gavigan doesn’t like
that and so hauls Zyzyk in front of a judge. But Zyzyk insists that the judge
himself will soon be whisked off the face of the earth! Gavigan doesn’t like
that: Judge Keeler is corrupt and a case is being built up against him. Will
Zyzyk’s words warn the judge to skip out of town? Police surveillance is
increased at once, so that the judge is being observed at every moment of the
day. But when the judge enters a phone booth, observed by two policemen, he
never exits. When the policemen lose their patience and look into the booth,
they discover that it is empty, and only the judge’s bloody glasses are left
behind!
This is another masterpiece from
Rawson. It’s another story idea that both he and John Dickson Carr tackled.
Unfortunately, Carr’s attempt to explain the phone booth disappearance is far
from satisfactory—in fact, it’s a downright mess. Happily, Clayton Rawson rises
to the challenge. This is a grand puzzle with another brilliant impossible
crime trick and one that at long last answers the riddle of the phone booth disappearance.
What are you doing still reading this? Go out and discover the puzzle for
yourself!
More short-shorts: Merlini and the
Lie Detector/Merlini and the Vanished
Diamonds/ Merlini and the Sounds
Effects Murder
These three short-short stories are sadly
not particularly good ones. Merlini and
the Lie Detector borders on cheating, the clue on which the solution hinges
is so small and given late in the story. Merlini
and the Vanished Diamonds has a supremely silly solution that makes you
wonder just how foolish the police department is to have fallen for the trick. Merlini and the Sound Effects Murder is
another variation on one of the most tired clichés in the genre—thank goodness
the master practitioners so rarely used it! Very few have managed to put an
interesting spin on this trick, and this story is not one of them.
Nothing is Impossible
Aliens have landed on the planet
Earth! More specifically, they have landed in a locked room, where they managed
to kill one man, strip another of his clothes (while keeping their arrangement
intact) and then turn invisible and walk through walls, having left convenient
footprints behind. It’s unfortunate that the Great Merlini is not a believer,
because he proceeds to prove that a far more ordinary agency was behind this
locked-room murder.
The locked room problem is a decent
one and the story is, as always, very fun to read (and often quite funny).
There’s just one problem: the killer’s plan has an almost fantastic quality of
complexity about it. To give effect D, the killer had to perform stupefactions
A, B, and C. Although these stupefactions have decent solutions of their own,
tied together they feel somewhat unnatural. Merely a good story, then, though
it has potential to be one of the greats.
Final Round of Stories
Miracles—All in the Day’s Work is a story in which Inspector Gavigan becomes
the key witness to a locked-room murder. The only problem is the locked room
trick instantly becomes apparent, to the point where you wonder why the police
even needed The Great Merlini’s assistance in the first place. The next story, Merlini and the Photographic Clues, is a
decent one in which a man seems to have been in two places at the same time…
but experienced readers won’t have much trouble figuring out howdunnit. The
last story in the collection, The World’s
Smallest Locked Room, is the least interesting of them all. It’s a story
about a poisoning attempt with only two suspects, but what boggles me the most
is how the witnesses instantly knew that they would be dealing with an
“impossible” poisoning, since the impossibility is never made clear. Is it
because everyone was eating the same things? But that’s nonsense— although they
all had coffee everyone put different things in it. And so the final story is
an unfortunately underwhelming way to conclude the collection.
***
And there you have it folks, that
was The Great Merlini. How was it?
Well, I say it’s well worthwhile. If the only stories here were Off the Face of the Earth, From Another World, and Nothing is Impossible, the book would still
be worthwhile! But you get plenty more stories, many of them short-shorts that
I don’t want to describe in detail for fear of ruining the plot. Although they
tend to be on the decent side, the final round of stories is an underwhelming
way to end the collection. The Great Merlini’s greatest challenges make these
stories seem like a cinch for the Great Man to solve in his sleep.
Still, it’s a wonderful read and I
highly recommend it. I bought a Kindle edition and was
very satisfied with it. (You can find more formats here.)
The editing, proofreading, and layout were wonderful. I had an easy time
reading the text and wasn’t distracted by OCR errors. And most important of
all, I discovered once again just why I loved Clayton Rawson’s work so much in
the first place. I loved getting to see The Great Merlini one more time, and
although I still have a novel to go—No
Coffin for the Corpse—before saying my last farewell, it was a pleasure to
see him at the top of his game for a few short stories.
If you’ve never read Clayton
Rawson’s story, this is a good place to start—although my personal
recommendation is to start out with that masterpiece Death from a Top Hat. Golden Age detection doesn’t get much better
or more ingenious!
Patrick Ohl ©2013
The
nineteen-year-old Patrick Ohl continues to plot to take over the world when he
isn’t writing reviews of books he reads on his blog, At the Scene of the Crime.
In his spare time he conducts genetic experiments in his top-secret laboratory,
hoping to create a creature as terrifying as the Giant Rat of Sumatra in a bid
to take over the world. His hobbies include drinking tea and going outside to
do a barbecue in -10°C weather.
THE GREAT MERLINI: The Complete Stories of the Magician Detective
(1979) by Clayton Rawson
Reviewed by Barry
Ergang
As I have acknowledged in an essay and in other book reviews,
I'm a sucker for impossible crime stories. When, years back, International Polygonics,
Ltd. reissued the four novels by Clayton Rawson that starred The Great Merlini,
crime-solving magician, I snapped them up. Although I felt the first one, Death From a Top Hat, piled on a few too
many seemingly impossible situations, as though the author were afraid he'd
never write and sell another book and had to demonstrate his entire repertoire
of cleverness in this one, I read—and enjoyed even more—its three successors. I
also read and liked three Merlini short stories in anthologies I acquired that
were focused on locked-room mysteries. When I discovered that The Mysterious
Press had reissued The Great Merlini,
which collects all twelve of Rawson's short stories about him, I snatched up the
Kindle edition. The stories are as follows.
Zelda the Snake Charmer has been strangled in her room—a
room on the eighth floor whose "only window is locked on the inside."
There's only one way in and out, and that's been under observation by a group
of other circus performers who are shooting craps in the corridor outside. A
frustrated Inspector Gavigan and Sergeant Brady aren't lacking for suspects
when they relate the events to Merlini, who solves the case when he picks up on
"The Clue of the Tattooed Man."
"Everybody," Gavigan growled, "tried to get
in. And you want me to believe nobody ever went out—that Lasko's murderer
vanished into thin air like a soap bubble." The exasperated inspector is
once again faced with a seemingly impossible murder and a group of four
suspects when the body of theatrical producer Jorge Lasko is found in a room with
a French window locked from the inside. Private detective Dan Foyle arrived on
the premises just before the two shots were fired, ran to the room, but saw
nobody leave. Actress Dorothy Dawn was out on the sundeck and swears nobody
exited the room via the window. Merlini seizes on "The Clue of the Broken
Legs" to solve the case.
In "The Clue of
the Missing Motive," Merlini tells Gavigan and Lieutenant Malloy, when
they show up at his home: "A man gets killed at dusk last evening just
across the street in the park—a hundred feet or so from my front door. Scores
of people there, as usual, and one man actually saw the victim as he fell. Yet
no one saw the murderer or heard the shot. I'm a magician. So I suspected you might
suspect me." The real suspects, however, live next door, and all have
motives for wanting one another dead. But what's the motive for killing the man
from Oklahoma who actually died? Merlini, of course, figures it out as soon as
the policemen provide him with the necessary details.
In one of the longer, more atmospheric, and much
better-developed stories in the book, which I first read years ago in the
anthology edited by Edward D. Hoch titled All
But Impossible!, Merlini's
journalist friend Ross Harte visits the magician before cabbing to Andrew
Drake's mansion to interview Drake for a magazine article. A man of
wide-ranging interests who says, "Put in enough money and you can
accomplish anything," Drake's latest obsession is extrasensory perception and
psychokinesis: "Unleash the power of the human mind and solve all our
problems." When he arrives, Harte meets a clearly agitated Dr. Garrett, Drake's
physician, on the doorstep. The two are admitted by Drake's daughter Elinor,
who tells them her father is in his study. Dr. Garrett tries the door, then
pounds on it and begs Drake to open it. When that proves futile, he and Harte
break it down. The scene inside is a bizarre one, not only because of Drake's
dead body, but also in part because of the unconscious psychic medium Rosa
Rhys, who is clad in a skimpy bathing suit despite it being a bitterly cold
January day. Gavigan and Merlini are summoned, and Merlini must determine
whether this locked-room murder was committed by a human or someone "From
Another World."
Anthologized in Death
Locked In, edited by Douglas G. Greene and Robert C.S. Adey, where I first
read it, "Off the Face of the Earth" begins with the saturnine
Gavigan telling Merlini and Ross Harte about the mysterious disappearance of
chorus girl Helen Hope. At a Park Avenue party she met Bela Zyyzk, who claims
to be a visitor from Antares and a mind-reader. In front of witnesses, Zyyzk
told Helen Hope she'd vanish off the face of the earth in three days—and she
did. The D.A. requested of Judge Keeler that Zyyzk be held as a material
witness, and Keeler granted the request. Then Zyyzk prophesied that Keeler,
too, would vanish into the "Outer Darkness." Keeler is of special
interest to the police because he's known to be on the take from the Castelli
mob, and has been under twenty-four-hour surveillance. Learning that the judge
has been to the safety deposit vault in his bank, has emerged carrying a
suitcase, and has gone to Grand Central Station, Gavigan orders a subordinate
to keep an eye on him and to "grab him the minute he tries to go through a
gate." When Gavigan, Merlini and Harte get to the station themselves, they
learn that a dazed Lieutenant Malloy and Sergeant Hicks had indeed been
constantly watching Keeler. They had taken up positions opposite one another on
either side of a line of phone booths. They saw Keeler go into one. When they
looked in the booth a few minutes later, it was empty, Keeler apparently having
vanished into thin air. It requires a magician like Merlini to explain this
conundrum.
"Merlini and the Lie Detector" is a lightweight,
negligible story that is neither fairly-clued nor one containing an impossible
crime. Merlini must determine which of two suspects murdered Carl Todd. His
method of doing so relies on a convenient oversight by the culprit, one that if
avoided would have conceivably prevented arrest.
When Gavigan introduces Merlini to George Hurley, the chief
of the Customs Service, the latter tells the magician: "I want to know how
you would go about making nearly half a million dollars disappear." The
suspected thief is another magician, a skilled card manipulator named Pierre
Aldo. The authorities can only hold him for twenty-four hours, and thorough
searches of his clothing and premises have turned up nothing. Merlini is on—and
up against—the clock in "Merlini and the Vanished Diamonds."
Another relatively brief story in which Gavigan and another
official, in this case F.B.I. agent Fred Ryan, present the magician with an
impossible situation, "Merlini and the Sound Effects Murder" deals
with the death of sound effects engineer Jerome Kirk. Having spent quite a
number of years in the retail audio business, I question a crucial aspect of
the story's solution. I haven't the technical expertise to say it's definitively
possible or impossible, but if the former, I'm not sure it's so easily
accomplished. To elaborate further would require a spoiler.
"Nothing Is Impossible" reads the sign behind the
counter in Merlini's Magic Shop, where the magician-cum-sleuth sells (and creates, when necessary) items for
professional magicians to use in their acts. It is also the title of the next
story in this collection, and another one I originally read in an anthology: The Locked Room Reader, edited by Hans
Stefan Santesson. This one concerns retired aviation pioneer Albert North, who
has handed the reigns of his company to his son-in-law, Charles Kane. Needing a
hobby to keep himself busy and engaged, North became fascinated by the idea of
extra-terrestrial beings visiting Earth in flying saucers, and has since become
"an unoffical clearing house for saucer information," as Ross Harte
explains to Merlini. When North is found shot to death in his study, which is
locked from the inside, and Charles Kane is found unconscious and naked—his
"shirt was inside the coat, neatly buttoned, the Countess Mara tie still in place, still
tied in a neat Windsor knot." His underwear is inside the top clothes and
his socks are inside his shoes. "Kane says his clothes were removed while
he was unconscious," Merlini tells Homicide's Lieutenant Doran. "They
would appear to have passed through
his body in the process." The appearance of what are apparently alien
hieroglyphics burned into the plaster wall, and the absence of the gun that
killed North, add to the puzzling circumstances, as do the four-inch-long,
three-toed footprints in the dust atop some filing cabinets. Merlini has to
figure out if E.T. committed murder and then beamed up to the mother ship, or
whether a human culprit killed North, then miraculously vanished from a locked
room. He also has to explain some of the aforementioned bizarre discoveries.
In "Miracles—All in the Day's Work," Merlini must
accompany an insistent Lieutenant Doran, acting on the orders of Inspector
Gavigan, to the Chancellor Building. Why the urgency? "What we got is a
murderer who just vanished into thin air —sixty-four stories up." Three
witnesses, one of whom is Inspector Gavigan, in the reception area of the
Hi-Fly Rod & Reel Company, hear Courtney answer the phone in his office a
while after a man in a Panama hat went in to see him. But after his secretary
rings him several times and he doesn't answer, she opens the door and finds him
slumped over his desk with a knife in his back. There is no sign of the man in
the Panama hat, and he couldn't have gotten out the window even if he were a
kind of human fly because the building has no ledges.
Lester Lee is a well-known Broadway gossip columnist. He's
also a blackmailer. When he's shot to
death, George J. Boyle isn't sorry, but he is enraged. Boyle is the producer of
the show "Magic and Music," and one of its stars, Inez Latour, has
been hauled in for questioning by the police just prior to opening night. Another
star is The Great Merlini. Boyle knows of his connections to the police and
insists that Merlini become involved and get Inez Latour back in time for
opening night. The magician, using his connections to the Homicide Department, discovers
that much of the evidence is photographic and demonstrates that what you see is
not always what's reality in "Merlini and the Photographic Clues."
The collection ends with another story narrated in the
first-person by Ross Harte. The action occurs at Pancakes Unlimited, where
Harte is having dinner with his friend Hammett Wilde, a private investigator.
Wilde is keeping an eye on Carl Hassleblad, the producer of an underground film
that unexpectedly became a hit, at the request of Hassleblad's wife. The
producer is dining with an actress who goes by the name Anna Love, and a writer
named Larry Allen. Both are demanding more money for an upcoming film, and Hassleblad
is balking at the idea when he suddenly bolts for the men's room. Wilde follows
him, then returns abruptly a moment later to enter a phone booth and call for
an ambulance and squad car. Hassleblad has been poisoned. Who could have done
it, and how? The restaurant isn't far from Merlini's home, and Wilde says he
has "a hunch that a magician may come in handy." It goes without
saying that he does, and ultimately solves "The World's Smallest Locked
Room."
I said at the outset that I'm extremely fond of impossible
crime stories. Unfortunately, other than the three I've read previously in
anthologies, I find the stories in this collection to be largely disappointing.
Several of the shorter ones are reminiscent of the old Minute- and Five-Minute
Mysteries—i.e., intellectual exercises of a supremely mechanical nature that
have little or no interest in engaging the reader via other elements of
storytelling. Clayton Rawson was a friend of impossible crime master John
Dickson Carr, who has often been criticized for superficial characterizations.
Compared with Rawson, he's Dostoyevsky. Rawson's style is plain and
straightforward, but lacks the color, vigor, and atmosphere that, to my mind,
tales of "miracle" crimes deserve.
As mentioned earlier, I read the Kindle edition. Although it
wants some better editing, its typos and punctuation errors are relatively few.
Its most glaring error, however, is the illustration of a three-toed footprint
that belongs in "Nothing is Impossible" but appears in "Merlini
and the Photographic Clues."
All things considered, I can only recommend The Great Merlini to mystery fans for
whom puzzle is pre-eminent, who are not especially interested in character and
atmosphere, and who are completists with regard to specific authors or types of
stories. Other readers need to look elsewhere.
© Barry Ergang 2013
Derringer Award-winner Barry Ergang's own impossible crime
novelette, "The Play of Light and Shadow," is available at Amazon
and Smashwords.
2 comments:
Great write-up, both of you. What a fun idea to give us two reviews for the price (?) of one.
The guys did a great job. Hopefully this will happen more often.
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