Sunday, December 15, 2024

Paula Messina Reviews: Silent Nights Editor Martin Edwards


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

 

 

Silent Nights by Paula Messina 

 

Christmas is a time of mysteries. Will Aunt Matilda finally stop making that fruit cake everyone detests? Will Uncle Virgil get through Christmas dinner sober? Will those pesky reindeer for once land on the roof without causing several thousand dollars of damage?

Will anyone suggest an anthology filled with great Christmas short stories?

Silent Nights satisfactorily answers the last question. Edited by Martin Edwards, this anthology has fifteen stories from the Golden Age of Detective Fiction set during the Yuletide. Some of the stories and their authors will be familiar. Others might ring a bell. Still others are highly unlikely to be familiar.

Nearly one hundred years after his death, Conan Doyle is still one of the most popular writers of English literature. “The Blue Carbuncle,” the story of the Christmas goose that got away, is most likely familiar to readers. In this case, familiarity does not breed contempt. Holmes and Watson are as comforting and welcomed as old slippers, tobacco included or not. The pair’s deep, abiding friendship is just one of the reasons readers flock back to Holmes and Watson again and again. Crackling good mysteries is the ultimate one.

Whether familiar or not, the stories of G.K. Chesterton (“The Flying Stars”), Dorothy L. Sayers (“The Necklace of Pearls”), and Margery Allingham (“The Case Is Altered”) are pleasant reminders of why this trio is still widely read.

While I thoroughly enjoyed the stories by the well-known writers, I found the most joy in being introduced to those writers who now haunt the denizens of the forgotten. In his introduction, Edwards says Nights “aims to introduce a new generation of readers to some of the finest detective story writers of the past.”

“Parlour Tricks” by Ralph Plummer, as Edwards notes, “deserves to be rescued from oblivion.” Edwards knows “nothing of Plummer’s life.” His short story involves hotel guests unable to leave, a theft, conjuring, and what could qualify as the most creative use of forensics in the genre.

“Cambric Tea” by Marjorie Bowen might lead you to reassess your relatives. Maybe they aren’t nearly as bad as you think. Regardless, think twice before drinking any proffered tea on Christmas day.

In Ethel Lina White’s “Waxworks,” Sonia, an ambitious, young journalist, spends the night locked in the Waxwork Collection of Oldhampton to determine if two recent nocturnal deaths were murder. Sonia quickly fears she won’t survive the night.

The last story, “Beef for Christmas,” by Leo Bruce stars Sgt. Beef, whom Edwards describes as “an engaging vulgarian with a passion for playing darts.” I recently discovered Sgt. Beef when I read Case for Three Detectives, an hilarious send-up of Golden Age mysteries. (See my review on Kevin’s Corner at https://kevintipplescorner.blogspot.com/2024/11/paula-messina-reviews-case-for-three.html.) Bruce is just one of the writers presented in Silent Nights that I intend to become more intimately acquainted with.

It’s also enjoyable to learn more about these writers in Edward’s two-paragraph bios. How did H.C. Bailey (“The Unknown Murderer”) go from being admired by no less than Agatha Christie to being forgotten?  J. Jefferson Farjeon’s Mystery in White was a best seller in its day. His offering here, “The Absconded Treasurer” is so obscure that “not even the British Library possesses a copy.”

Ultimately, it doesn’t matter how well known these authors and their short stories are. A good story is always in fashion. A great way to enjoy the season is by reading Silent Nights while sitting by a roaring fire in the comfort of an overstuffed chair with a cup of nutmeg-dusted eggnog. 


Amazon Associate Publishing News: https://amzn.to/3VtxEAS


Paula Messina ©2024

Paula Messina in a Native New Englander. Her writing has appeared in various publications including Devil’s Snare, Wolfsbane, Black Cat Weekly, Ovunque Siamo, and THEMA. Her current project is a novel set in Boston during 1944.

No comments:

Post a Comment