FFB is back today in the form of Barry Ergang and
his review of Trial By Fury by Craig Rice. Make sure you check out the full FFB
list over at Patti Abbott’s blog.
You know, the Patti Abbott who was nominated for an Edgar Award for her
book, SHOT
IN DETROIT.
TRIAL BY FURY (1941)
by Craig Rice
Reviewed by Barry
Ergang
Wanting a break from the
hurly-burly of Chicago, Jake and Helene Justus hie themselves off to Jackson,
Wisconsin and the county courthouse, from which they want to obtain a fishing
license. They haven’t been there very long when vacationus interruptus occurs in the form of ex-Senator Peveley being
shot by a person unknown in what initially seems to be under impossible
conditions since there are six people close by, all of whom are prominent local
officials. None of them have seen the shooter—or so they claim.
The senator is the second
murder victim in Jackson in thirty-two years. This complicates the inept and irascible
Sheriff Marvin Kling’s life considerably, since it’s the first murder he’s ever
had to investigate. It also complicates Jake’s life, because he and Helene are
looked upon as strangers in small-town Jackson, and thus highly suspect. When
the sheriff decides to hold them as material witnesses, Helene sends a telegram
to their old friend, lawyer John J. Malone, in Chicago, tersely apprising him
of their situation—especially Jake’s—and asking him to come help them. After an
exchange of additional telegrams, some of the lawyer’s indicating reluctance, Malone
finally agrees.
Three more murders, each
committed in a different manner, occur. Is Jackson County dealing with one
killer or four different ones?
Jake disappears. Is he on
the run either from actual guilt, or simply to elude capture until the crimes
are solved? Or has he been murdered or kidnapped?
It’s up to Malone to
resolve matters and reveal the identity of the actual killer or killers.
I’m pretty sure that this
was the first Craig Rice novel I ever read back in the Dark Ages of my teen
years, when a cousin who learned I was enamored of detective novels gave me a
copy. Since so many years had passed, I decided to reread it.
I can recommend Trial by Fury as an entertaining and
reasonably well-paced whodunit, but I wouldn’t classify it as one of Craig
Rice’s best. She was an exemplar of the screwball comedy school of mystery, but
this particular novel, though it has its share of humorous dialogue, is not
nearly as funny as other titles in the Malone/Justus series, where both
dialogue and situations result in zanier scenes.
Barry Ergang © 2017
Among his other works, Derringer Award-winner Barry Ergang’s locked-room novelette, The Play of Light and Shadow, can be found in e-book formats at Smashwords.com and Amazon.com
1 comment:
I'm a big Malone fan. The series improved when the focus shifted from Helen and Jake to Malone. TRIAL BY FURY was the first (and only) drunken bloodhound book I read.
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