Starting in 1962, British author Lana Hutton Bowen-Judd (1922-1985) published 48
mysteries under the name of Sara Woods, three under the name Anne Burton, three
under the name of Mary Challis, and three under the name Margaret Leek. Born in
Bradford, Yorkshire, England, she emigrated to Canada with her husband and
there undertook her astonishingly prolific writing career, averaging two books
a year, using her experience in a solicitor’s office as the basis for many of
the plots.
Antony Maitland, the protagonist of the Sara Woods books, is
a London barrister much like his legal cousin Perry Mason in that he is not
content to simply practice law, he is compelled to investigate the cases that
he undertakes. Maitland is surrounded by supportive family and friends who
often ride shotgun with him on his investigations, since a war injury to his
shoulder has left him unable to drive. He is devoted to his wife, with whom he
grew up and married when they were still teenagers. (This is unusual, as most
mystery protagonists are divorced, unhappily married, or desperately single.)
His uncle with whom he practices law is often highly critical of Antony and his
vagaries but deeply protective all the same.
While a number of his cases play out in London, Woods sent
him to her birth place of Yorkshire to visit friends and to stumble into crime
there often enough to give everyone a change of scenery. In addition, he is
sometimes called to represent clients in Chedcombe, a rural village in central
England, where he is practicing on the West Midland circuit when Miss Vera
Langhorne, a local solicitor, approaches him to help her in Let’s
Choose Executors (Harper & Row, 1966). She’s been retained to
represent a young woman named Fran Gifford, who has been accused of murdering a
wealthy resident who quite shockingly disinherited her family in favor of Fran
in her latest will. The fact that some of the relatives were known to have
quarreled with old Mrs. Randall seems to have carried no weight with the police
and Crown Prosecutor, and Fran was arrested within days after the discovery
that the death was not due to natural causes. Antony delves into the motive and
alibis of the people around Mrs. Randall while the general populace of
Chedcombe views his efforts as a big city mouse interfering with their country
mouse ways. The family relationships are far more complex than they appear to
be on the surface, yet the actual culprit turns out to be quite a surprise.
After this book Maitland finds cause to visit Chedcombe
often, which happily makes Miss Langhorne, who is an interesting lady, a
recurring character. One of the most entertaining aspects of these trips to
Chedcombe is the suspicion with which the locals view Maitland and his efforts
to find justice for his clients. This suspicion sometimes finds expression in
violence of all kinds, including gunplay and arson.
I first encountered this series a good many years ago and it
holds up well under the passage of time. I highly recommend these excellent,
well-plotted legal mysteries with durable, convincing characters. No one has
seen fit to re-issue them in any form recently, electronic or otherwise, so check
thrift stores and eBay to locate reading copies.
·
Hardcover: 246 pages
·
Publisher: Harper & Row; First
Edition edition, 1966
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Language: English
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ASIN: B002J9V9VY
Aubrey Hamilton © 2018
Aubrey Hamilton is a
former librarian who works on Federal IT projects by day and reads mysteries at
night.
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