Showing posts with label Christianna Brand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christianna Brand. Show all posts
Monday, November 25, 2024
Beneath the Stains of Time: Tour de Force (1955) by Christianna Brand
Beneath the Stains of Time: Tour de Force (1955) by Christianna Brand: The last two, three years of the reprint renaissance have been especially kind to the legacy of Christianna Brand as Green for Danger (194...
Friday, May 24, 2024
Beneath the Stains of Time: Shadowed Sunlight (1945) by Christianna Brand
Beneath the Stains of Time: Shadowed Sunlight (1945) by Christianna Brand: Last time, I discussed Christianna Brand's Death in High Heels (1941), very much an apprentice work full with undeveloped potential and...
Tuesday, May 21, 2024
Beneath the Stains of Time: Death in High Heels (1941) by Christianna Brand
Beneath the Stains of Time: Death in High Heels (1941) by Christianna Brand: Last month, I revisited Christianna Brand's pièce de résistance, Green for Danger (1944), which is set in a World War II hospital unde...
Thursday, April 04, 2024
Beneath the Stains of Time: Green for Danger (1944) by Christianna Brand
Beneath the Stains of Time: Green for Danger (1944) by Christianna Brand: Green for Danger (1944) is Christianna Brand 's second novel about her series-detective, Inspector Cockrill, which is not only regarded...
Tuesday, April 11, 2023
Beneath the Stains of Time: Suddenly at His Residence (1946) by Christianna Brand
Beneath the Stains of Time: Suddenly at His Residence (1946) by Christianna Brand: The past ten years have been a deluge of reprints, translations and even some newer, classically-styled works that turned into a flood of No...
Wednesday, April 21, 2021
Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: "Clever and Quick" by Christianna Brand
Bitter Tea and Mystery: Short Story Wednesday: "Clever and Quick" by Chris...: This is a very clever short story about a couple who earn their living acting in the theater, but are not getting roles any more. They are...
Friday, January 04, 2013
FFB Review: "Death of Jezebel" by Christianna Brand---Reviewed by Patrick Ohl
Please welcome back Patrick Ohl for this installment of Friday's Forgotten Books......
One of the most criminally forgotten mystery writers ever is Christianna Brand. Brand was a supreme talent, who perfectly fused complex puzzle-oriented mystery with strong characterization. With her novels, it isn’t simply about this evening’s eccentric detective, rolling the dice to figure out the murderer, or anything of the sort. Brand could create likeable, believable characters the reader comes to know closely, feeling sympathy for both the innocent and the guilty, and as a result, her books often have depressing endings.
Take Death of Jezebel, for instance, one of Brand’s most highly-praised works (and also a very hard one to find!). The story opens in 1940 as a nice young man named Johnny Wise discovers his girlfriend Perpetua Kirk with another man, Earl Anderson—this is cruelly unveiled to him by a rather sadistic woman, Isabel Drew. Stricken with grief, Johnny commits suicide.
The story then skips forward seven years: in 1947, Isabel is still as nasty as ever, Earl Anderson is an out-of-work ageing actor, and Perpetua Kirk has never quite been the same— her spirit died on the same night as Johnny, but her body lives on… The three players involved in Johnny’s tragedy are soon thrust into a new drama, as each get threatening notes, warning them that they will die. And the killer makes good on his (or her) promise, striking under seemingly impossible circumstances at a pageant, as Isabel (often referred to simply as Jezebel) is strangled on top of a tower in full view of thousands of witnesses and thrown down to the stage below. Thus begins a complex mystery and drama…
Brand brings together two detectives
to unravel this case. The first is Inspector Charlesworth, who starred in
Brand’s first novel, Death in High Heels, and apparently one more. I
have yet to read either. The second is her more regular detective, Inspector
Cockrill, who is the main detective in this book. Together they investigate the
crime, coming up with a few theories to explain the impossibility, and it seems
like each time they’ve got a plausible explanation, Brand purposely blows it
sky-high.
This is what makes Brand one of the
best writers all-time, in my view: the excellent way she fused a complex plot
with excellent characterization, which proves that yes, it is possible
for these two to co-exist. (I admit, however, that my last outing with Brand
was a rather off-putting disappointment: Suddenly at His Residence began
as a delightful parody of conventional mysteries, with a murder victim ready to
alter his will at the drop of a hat. Unfortunately, it suddenly lost its touch
when the murder actually occurred… But this is a review of Death of Jezebel.)
Brand is at the top of her form
here. She doesn’t linger in character angst, but she puts you through the
individual struggles of her characters quite effectively nonetheless. She has a
very clever impossible situation and she offers a few false solutions. The
story is laced with a sense of humour which pops up from time to time—this is a
dark work, after all, but that doesn’t entirely banish humour from the
proceedings. Overall, the book is wonderful—at the very least, it is just as
good as, if not better than, Green for Danger, another of her
masterpieces.
However, Death of Jezebel has
one very distinct advantage over Green for Danger, and that is the
character of Inspector Cockrill (“Cockie”). He becomes his own character in
this novel, while he was a relatively nondescript character in the past. Here
he is shown as a man who, in the eyes of the youth-obsessed world, is far too
old to be hanging around anymore, but he’s still got some fight left in him,
and by gum, he isn’t going to give up. You get to share not only the suspects’
emotions, but you’re shown Cockie’s insecurities as well, and overall, this
invests your attention in the book even more.
What more can I say? Brand does
everything right and really outperforms herself. This is a wonderful book,
certainly a candidate as one of the all-time mystery classics. I was lucky
enough to find it on Interlibrary Loan, but when I get the chance, I will track
down a copy and buy Death of Jezebel, which will then be guaranteed a
permanent spot on my shelf. It is worth every penny spent on the effort.
Patrick Ohl ©2013
At 19 years of age, Patrick Ohl has already read the complete works of
Agatha Christie and has almost done the same with John Dickson Carr. His taste
in mysteries is very comprehensive, including the intellectual challenges of
John Rhode, the psychological suspense of Margaret Millar, and the violent
world of master thief Parker. He currently plans to write his autobiography,
tentatively entitled I can’t stand postmodernism, and to sell millions of
copies worldwide, gain international fame and influence, and use this to get
some attention for criminally neglected authors such as this one. His reviews
can be found on his blog, At the Scene of the Crime.
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