The Edgar Award–winning author of the Peter Duluth Mysteries (as Patrick Quentin) “keeps the reader guessing” in a mystery set at a British boys’ school ( The New York Times ).
Patrick Quentin, best known for the Peter Duluth puzzle mysteries, also penned outstanding detective novels from the 1930s through the 1960s under other pseudonyms, including Q. Patrick and Jonathan Stagge. Anthony Boucher wrote: “Quentin is particularly noted for the enviable polish and grace which make him one of the leading American fabricants of the murderous comedy of manners; but this surface smoothness conceals intricate and meticulous plot construction as faultless as that of Agatha Christie.”
The lads at Craiglea, a preparatory school on the Bristol Channel, are unimpeachable young men. The faculty? Unflappable. Until a student is found smothered in a linen closet. The son of a controversial American judge, Eric Moss, along with his brother, had already been a victim of a botched kidnapping back in the States. Ironically, they’d been enrolled at Craiglea for their own safety. But if it was an inside job, who did it? The suspects number a staff of sixteen and sixty-eight boys. But one precocious student might know more than he’s letting on . . .
Patrick Quentin, Q. Patrick and Jonathan Stagge were pen names under which Hugh Callingham Wheeler (19 March 1912 – 26 July 1987), Richard Wilson Webb (August 1901 – December 1966), Martha Mott Kelly (30 April 1906–2005) and Mary Louise White Aswell (3 June 1902 – 24 December 1984) wrote detective fiction. In some foreign countries their books have been published under the variant Quentin Patrick. Most of the stories were written by Webb and Wheeler in collaboration, or by Wheeler alone. Their most famous creation is the amateur sleuth Peter Duluth. In 1963, the story collection The Ordeal of Mrs. Snow was given a Special Edgar Award by the Mystery Writers of America.
Patrick Quentin is one of my favorite authors. He always has an interesting situation with mysterious happenings and incredible characters. It’s so nice that this book is now available as an e-book. I searched a long time at all second hand book stores, but couldn’t find a copy. But now I have it and devoured it in nearly one sitting. Two brothers are killed in a school and the search for the killer is on! Many secrets are revealed before the culprit is finally caught. This book is a bit shorter than his other books, but is perhaps even better because of that. I only hope that Quentin’s other hard to find books will soon also become available as e- books. Mysterious Press is doing us a great favor in republishing Quentin’s books under his own name and the pseudonym of Jonathan Stagge.
Pokračuju ve svém retro koutku a dohánění Patricka Quentina. U nás hodně vycházel po dvou, takže najednou hodnotím dva jeho romány, z opačné strany spektra a kvality Smrt ve škole (Death Goes to School)… je divná. Je to skoro dobrodružný příběh pro mladé jinochy, kdyby se tam s celkem milou lhostejností ti mladí jinoši nevraždili. Je to až skoro jako z nějakého skeče Monty Pythonů, kdy na škole umírají děti a kantoři (a i rodiče těch dětí) na to koukali spíš jako na nepříjemnou patálii. Plus si člověk opravdu uvědomí, že Patrick Quentin (ať už pod tím jménem zrovna psal kdokoliv) není detektivkář, je autor thrillerů. (Ale může hrát i roli to, že jak už je to starší, člověk automaticky vytipuje nejméně podezřelou osobu a ta bude pachatelem.) Ono ani v druhém příběhu, Do náruče smrti, nemůžete čekat zapeklitou záhadu. Ale příběh to dohání obrovským tempem. Výhoda starých knížek je v tom, že není nutné se držet reality, skutečných emocí a prostě všeho, co přidává knize na stránkách. Opět se vrací Peter Dulluth, který se zaplete do něčeho, čemu sám nerozumí… a kvůli čemu po něm jdou. Kdo, to úplně přesně neví. Tady se hodně zábavně a dobře pracuje s jojo efektem, kdy je sice omezený počet postav, ale pořád se střídá jejich důvěryhodnost s nedůvěryhodností. Hrdina někoho podezřívá, pak se stane něco, na základě čeho mu začne věřit, aby se vzápětí přihodilo něco, po čem je jasné, že je to padouch… než se to zase změní. Je to překvapivě zábavné a vyvolává to správně paranoidní pocity. Jasně, je to jednoduchý a přímočarý, ale svým retro způsobem překvapivě zábavný. Má to tempo a daří se tu poměrně jednoduchými způsoby vyvolávat napětí.
Mrs. Bernard-Moss, the beautiful second wife of an American judge travels to England to visit her step-sons, Eric and Irving, at Craiglea school. The boys were sent abroad for their safety, while their father oversees the trial and sentencing of the notorious Heller gang, convicted for their involvement in anti-Semitic crimes. At Craiglea, it is visiting day, and while the visitors engage in a series of Parents-versus-Boys games, their attention is focused on the enigmatic Myra Bernard-Moss. An attack on Mrs. Bernard-Moss is followed by a double tragedy, when one twin, and then the other, is murdered. Called in to investigate the case is Sir Wilfrid Pemberly, Chief Constable, but a quartet of amateurs - the headmaster's daughter, Sophonisba Dodd, the English master, Harvey Nettleton, an American detective working undercover as the school's porter, and a clever student, St. John Lucas - take on an investigation of their own. (I confess, "Sophonisba" was a new one on me.) Written in 1936 by "Q. Patrick" who best known for his post-Doyle amateur sleuth Peter Duluth. Q Patrick was a pseudonym used by two pairs of writers, Hugh Wheeler and Richard Webb, and Martha Kelley and Mary Louise White, Death Goes to School is a cut above the post-Doyle mysteries of the era, with a cast of interesting characters and a neat double-twist at the end.
So curiously callous about the deaths of two small boys, the whole rigmarole becomes meaningless. I guess there's a reason the victims in these things are usually crusty old men..