At Bouchercon in October I learned that my friend Sarah
Byrne and I share a mutual admiration for the satirical mysteries of the
incomparable Ruth Dudley Edwards. I re-read one of them upon my return home and
found it every bit as good as I remembered it. Clubbed to Death (St. Martin’s Press, 1992) is the 4th
title in the Robert Amiss series. Later in the set of 12 books, released
between 1982 and 2012, Baroness
(Jack) Troutbeck joins him in blithely skewering the English
establishment.
A historian, journalist, and prize-winning biographer, Dr. Dudley
Edwards won the Crime Writers’ Association Gold Dagger for Non-Fiction
for Aftermath: The Omagh
Bombings and the Families’ Pursuit of Justice. Her mysteries
have been shortlisted by the Crime Writers' Association for the John Creasey
Award for the best first novel and twice for the Last Laugh Award for the
funniest crime novel of the year. Murdering
Americans won the Last Laugh award at the 2008 CrimeFest in Bristol.
Robert Amiss is a former British civil servant, caught up in
the economic roller coaster that was England in the late 1900s, always looking
for some kind of revenue-generating employment. This chronic need for work sets
him up beautifully to be sent undercover by his police friends into a
long-established gentleman’s club to learn why the secretary of the group seems
to have committed suicide in a very public, very messy way in full view of
several members. That the secretary was attempting to bring order to the
outdated and eccentric operations of the club, to the dismay of some of the
members, only heightens police suspicions.
Amiss discovers that members of the ffeatherstonehaugh
(pronounced Fanshaw) club live about 100 years in the past, consuming
gargantuan meals and drinking exquisitely expensive wines while paying a
pittance in membership fees. Where is the money coming from? And where is it
going? He has begun to quietly sort through the club’s finances and to
establish alibis while working as a live-in waiter when another board officer
is killed. There is no question about suicide this time, and the police swarm
the club looking for answers.
It would be all too easy to overlook the soundly contrived
mystery amid the snickers and chortles that erupt as Dudley Edwards’ incisive
wit pokes and prods London’s clubs, public schools, the English language, pomposity,
and posh accents. I particularly enjoyed the joke about The Economist, Dudley Edwards’ former employer. Yet focusing only on
the humor does this well-plotted amateur detective story a great disservice.
Mystery readers unfamiliar with the series will find this title a good place to
start.
·
Hardcover: 190 pages
·
Publisher: St Martins Press (September 1, 1992)
·
Language: English
·
ISBN-10: 0312081634
·
ISBN-13: 978-0312081638
Aubrey Hamilton © 2017
Aubrey Hamilton is a former
librarian who works on Federal IT projects by day and reads mysteries at night.
1 comment:
Thanks so much, Aubrey. I really appreciate your kind comments. Best wishes, Ruth
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