Taking us into a 1930s London of grimy back streets, smoky cafes and shabby rooms, Plain Murder, C. S. Forester's second crime novel, is a brilliantly atmospheric and gripping portrayal of the dark heart of a killer, published in Penguin Modern Classics.
'They'll get you for certain,' said Oldroyd. 'Then they'll hang you.'
At the Universal Advertising Agency on the Strand, London, a murder is being planned. Three men have been discovered taking bribes and face the grim prospect of the dole queue, unless they can get rid of the person who caught them. Their ringleader, thick-set and vicious Mr Morris, soon discovers that killing is far easier than he thought - and that he even has a talent for it. He might, he feels, be superhuman. But as he will discover, there is no such thing as the perfect crime, and no deed goes unpunished.
Cecil Louis Troughton Smith (1899-1966), better known by his pen name Cecil Scott Forester, was an English novelist who rose to fame with tales of naval warfare. His most notable works were the 11-book Horatio Hornblower series, depicting a Royal Navy officer during the Napoleonic era, and The African Queen (1935; filmed in 1951 by John Huston). His novels A Ship of the Line and Flying Colours were jointly awarded the 1938 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction. He began his career with the crime novels Payment Deferred and PlainMurder, now reissued in Penguin Modern Classics along with The Pursued, which was lost for over 60 years.
Cecil Scott Forester was the pen name of Cecil Louis Troughton Smith, an English novelist who rose to fame with tales of adventure and military crusades. His most notable works were the 11-book Horatio Hornblower series, about naval warfare during the Napoleonic era, and The African Queen (1935; filmed in 1951 by John Huston). His novels A Ship of the Line and Flying Colours were jointly awarded the 1938 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction.
A plain delicious murder! In a paper company there are three workers who wants more power and faster. With a fool proof plan they execute a plain murder which opens a Pandora's box of power play, lies, blackmailing and more murders. With one of the three being more hungry than others, one way or another they all have face their doom.
I have exactly no idea why this book has such low ratings. I had first read this novel translated in Bengali(my regional language) and read the original a few months ago. Needless to say that the original fascinated me more.
There is a say in Bengali language that "Greed leads to sin and sin leads to murder". That is exactly what drives this novel. Yes we can all imagine the inevitable doom with a little guessing game of "Who is gonna be the last man standing?" while reading the book. But what works very very well is the narration. From the point of view of the worst character, C. S. Forester takes the reader on a ride of 'mind of a murder planner'. It should be mentioned that the novel is set in 1930's era and thus unlike todays techno-thrillers, this one is purely and deliciously psychological.
Sometimes the ride matters more than the destination and "Plain Murder" is a bright proof of that.
I've read many of the books written by C.S. Forester. I've been working through his Horatio Hornblower adventure series. He's written some excellent series based on both World Wars; The General, The Ship. His The African Queen was also translated into an excellent movie which won Humphrey Bogart an Oscar. He's also written some excellent crime stories. I've enjoyed Payment Deferred and now have just completed Plain Murder. In its way, it's a simple story but at the same time, a fascinating one. 3 employees of an advertising agency are under threat of being fired for using bribery in finding customers. Under the thrall of one of the three, Mr. Morris, they determine that their supervisor must be murdered before he can put in his word to the owner of the business. Morris is the ring leader and pressures the others into assisting him so that they can be blackmailed into silence. But murder can become something is easier and easier to commit. We get an interesting portrayal of Morris; his treatment of his family, his plotting mind, his matter-of-fact cruelty. The story moves along nicely and the action is sufficient. It was a different kind of story and I enjoyed it very much. I've enjoyed seeing the variety of stories in Forester's mind and his portrayal of his characters and their motivations. Well worth trying. (3.5 stars)
From BBC Radio 4 - Saturday Drama: Most famous for his Hornblower series, C.S. Forester wrote three seminal psychological thrillers at the start of his career that took crime writing in a new direction, portraying ordinary, desperate people committing monstrous acts, and showing events spiralling terribly, chillingly, out of control.
Plain Murder, set in 1928, takes us into a London advertising agency. Morris, Oldroyd and Reddy, have been caught taking bribes. One of their colleagues threatens to blow the whistle on them. Instant dismissal will inevitably be the result, and at a time of severe unemployment, their future prospects are bleak. Morris, a menacing bully, offers them a road out of their dilemma - a perfect murder, cleverly disguised as a tragic accident. But is there such a thing as the perfect murder?
Having recently binge-read three of Forester's crime stories, this is the one with the most unpleasant protagonist. First published in 1930, this is the first of the trio making up the 'London Noir' collection recently broadcast on Radio 4 Extra and is in much the same vein as the other two, focusing on the life of an 'ordinary' man who more or less falls into murder without having previously planned or premeditated it. As with all of Forester's crime stories, there is a twist in the tale …
If you enjoy period drama/crime, then give it a try.
Two can keep a secret if one of them is dead. In this case it's three advertising clerks trying to hide the death of a fourth, and the cascading effects of a murder committed for 6 pounds sterling. Not a mystery, the murder is revealed in detail, but a psychological thriller as we follow three men and their reactions to the crime. Low level white collar workers with simple and unexceptional lives are changed by a heinous act. And the people around them are none the wiser. Well written and entertaining.
As for “Payment Deferred”, an utterly lurid story, the unscrupulous plots of an evil man, and an unpredictable ending. Shame this author just wrote a few crime novels... So well written, though, that I may even try with the Horacio Hornblower adventure saga...
A very good crime tale, featuring the cold-blooded protagonist, Charlie Morris, who works for an advertising agency.
When Morris and two work mates, Oldroyd and Reddy, are caught in the act of accepting bribes at their workplace by a supervisor, they are terrified this will mean dismissal from their jobs.
In the London of the late-twenties/early-thirties jobs are hard to come by, and anyone sacked from their work will have a hard time finding other employment. The prospect of being unemployed, going cold and hungry is a prospect they can't bear to think of.
Fortunately their boss is out of town and unaware of any sackable offences. The objective of Morris and his colleagues is to prevent the supervisor from ratting on them. Cold-blooded Morris decides the supervisor must be killed. His two work mates are not so keen on this idea, but reluctantly agree to go ahead with it, becoming accomplices. The murder is committed, the trio save their jobs, and Morris actually gets promoted, taking over the dead supervisor's position.
Morris lets power go to his head in his new position and bullies staff, including his two friends who are not going to be friends for too much longer. When they get the jitters about what they have been involved in, they become problematic to Morris. He can't afford to have either of them rat on him, which would involve him being sent to the gallows as well as themselves. Something must be done, maybe he should kill two other people as well?
So huge is his ego, so cold and heartless he is, he later decides in addition to these, another person should also die. He'll resort to anything to save his life, advance himself to greater heights in his work, and enjoy new gains in his personal life as well. But will he succeed in getting all his own way?
This a fast moving and enjoyable book that can be read over several days. The book does show its age, with some quaint dialogue, and occasional wordy passages, but overall it's very well written. Maybe not quite as good (IMO) as his previous crime book PAYMENT DEFFERED, but still recommended.
Forester's other crime book, the long-lost THE PURSUED, was very good as well. Worth checking out
This is my second pre-Hornblower crime novel by C.S. Forester. Deferred Payment was the first (and The Pursued comes next) and it was just as good. I don't know how to describe what CSF does. We get the inside of the killer's mind, a sociopath for sure. And the insides of a lot of minds. Am reminded of Highsmith as she also plumbs the depths of madness. The narrator was good--he did all kinds of English and Scottish accents. Late 1920's England. Men with hope and ambition joined firms where they might rise and their pay might rise. 6 pounds 1 shilling was enough to get by; 7 p. 1 s. was a significant difference. As far as I can do the math, that one pound raise was equal to about $106.
The 2nd of a trio of crime fiction by this author. It changed the style of crime fiction to writing about the ordinary man or person(s) commiting crimes from the usual scenario of the upper classes gathering at a house party with servants and police officers knowing their place.
'Plain Murder' is a pyschological thriller rather than a police procedural. We know the perpetrators - it's just a question of motive and where do events take the protagonists.
Forester has a dry and somewhat distant narrative in places but his description where action and confrontation are exciting and realistic. The pace picks up as the story gets darker. The reader will certainly want to keep reading.
Charlie Morris is one of those evil, amoral, charismatic and strangely erotic characters who were later epitomised in Highsmith's Ripley.
His desire for money leads him and two co-worker into some doubtful business practices and to murder. Ironically, almost at the same time, he achieves great success in the advertising agency where he works.
The plot is well-constructed and the atmosphere tense throughout.
I do have two issues. Why is Morris explicitly Jewish? Nothing in the plot necessitates this. Secondly, why is Mary Morris made to appear as so unremittingly awful?
Interesting and recommendable portrayal of criminality.
A whydunit rather than a whodunit, this is (unintentionally) a fascinating look at 1930s British middle-class fears and anxieties. And it's definitely stuck in my mind long after I read it! (14+)
*Please note: this review is meant as a recommendation only. Please do not use it in any marketing material, online or in print, without asking permission from me first. Thank you!*
This is a good novel and well written but I wondered whether it was aimed more at younger readers. The plot is concerned with office intrigue and murder. Morris, the main protagonist, is an evil cunning plotter who tries to do away with anyone who threatens his ambitions. One somehow knows that it will all end badly for him but the ending came as a surprise.
I'm glad Forester moved on from this type of story and concentrated on military history. This was ok, just good enough to finish. It did reminded me of the old Michael Caine movie A Shock to the System. The plots are similar, a businessman tries to get ahead at his company by killing his coworkers.
This was an interesting story which I quite enjoyed. I usually don't mind reading stories written in the early to mid 20th Century as I enjoy seeing how the language idioms have changed. However this story constantly referred to wages, and it jarred a bit to read that a rise of £1 per week was sufficient to bring about a lifestyle change for a family of four.
Decent little suspense thriller featuring a nasty little toe-rag. Probably a bit ahead of its time in it's (admittedly crude) venture into it's psychological exploration of a "bad man". Worth a look if you're after a quick distraction.
Beaucoup plus qu'un roman d'Agatha Christie ou qu'une émission de Midsomer Murders, ce livre nous plonge dans la tête d'un meurtrier qui cherche à éliminer les pistes qui pourraient l'amener à l'échafaud. Sans contredit, C.S. Forester est l'un de mes auteurs préférés.
Solid entry in the Golden Age of Murder Mysteries. Not a mystery as such but a crime novel about an odious murderer who has to keep committing more crimes to cover his trail, the tension being what will he do next and will he get caught. Well written in the tight newspaper style of the day.
C.S Forester does not disappoint again with this novel, which engaged me throughout. Easy and suspenseful and happy to have read a trilogy of his crime works that are lesser known....
First Forester book that I’ve read. A quick read, it’s a good psychological thriller, more on the uncanny adventure of the murderer itself, frightening and gripping until the last page.