Sunday, November 24, 2024

Paula Messina Reviews: Case for Three Detectives: A Sergeant Beef Mystery by Leo Bruce


Please welcome Paula Messina back to the blog today..... 

 

Case for Three Detectives

 

By Paula Messina 

 

Case for Three Detectives by Leo Bruce is a delicious send up of the traditional British mystery. Mrs. Thurston, a lovely but dimwitted woman, retires to her bedroom after a night of entertaining guests. Mrs. Thurston screams. Her husband, the Thurston’s lawyer Williams, and Townsend, who narrates the novel, rush to her aid, only the door is locked. After breaking down the door, the men find Mrs. Thurston dead, her throat slashed.

Williams immediately takes over and searches every inch of the room. The windows are bolted. There is no conceivable way for the murderer to escape, but escape he did. The husband, guests, and staff are stumped. Williams insists the only explanation is something unworldly.

Rigor mortis hasn’t set in when three detectives, Lord Simon Pimsoll, Monsieur Amer Picon, and Monsignor Smith, arrive like bloodhounds following a scent. These amateur detectives dazzle the characters and readers with their brilliance. Mystery fans, especially those who revel in the Golden Age of Detective Fiction, will immediately recognize the lineage of the three detectives, Lord Peter Wimsey, Hercule Poirot, and Father Brown.

Pimsoll, Picon, and Smith are so brilliant they don’t need to bother with evidence. Mere details would get in the way of their superior intellects and preternatural ability to know who the killer is and why poor Mrs. Thurston had to die. The facts they uncover include a will that favors the staff and a stepson who stands to profit from Mrs. Thurston’s death. No one knows who or where the stepson is. What would a mystery be without blackmail? Voilà! The wealthy Mrs. Thurston’s account is overdrawn. Someone is blackmailing her because of an affair with the chauffeur who is more interested in marrying the maid. There’s a surfeit of reasons to kill Mrs. Thurston.

Case is the first in a series of Sgt. Beef mysteries. From the get go, Beef says he knows who done it. The three detectives dismiss Beef as a beer-swilling, dart-throwing dullard who couldn’t find his way home after a night at the pub, forget find a murderer. Bruce spins another send up with Beef, who barely appears in the novel. What kind of series stars a character who remains in the background for most of the book?

Parts of Case are laugh-out-loud funny. Bruce nails the most annoying traits of Wimsey, Poirot, and Brown. Pimsoll is an arrogant ass. Picon is in love with himself and his brilliant mind. Msgr. Smith rarely says anything that makes sense. Three detectives mean they provide three solutions with three different murderers. Which one is correct?

Can the star of the series, the dipsomaniac, honest-to-goodness, real-life detective—well real life in terms of the novel—better the three brilliant detectives and bag the murderer? You’ll have to read the book to find out.

In true Golden Age fashion, readers are unlikely to figure out who the murderer is.

Bruce pokes fun at Dorthy L. Sayers, Agatha Christie, and G. K. Chesterton, his contemporaries and giants of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction, but he also has his tongue firmly pressed against his cheek as he makes himself part of the joke. After all, he’s a mystery writer as well. The joke can be extended to all mystery writers who manipulate the plot to satisfy their endings.

Leo Bruce, born Rupert Croft-Cooke (1903 – 1979), was a prolific English writer who published non-fiction, novels, short stories, screenplays and more under his real name as well as his pseudonym. Bruce wrote a second mystery series featuring schoolmaster Carolus Deene.

Some readers will be put off by the lack of action. Case for Three Detectives is quite talky, but the dialogue is hilarious. Case is great fun and worth a read.


  

Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4idZ8Ev

 

  

Paula Messina ©2024 

Paula Messina writes essays as well as humorous and historical fiction. “Fish Eyes” (Devil’s Snare: Best New England Crime Stories 2024) marks Donatello Laguardia’s print debut. 


 

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