The man who dared make fun of Sherlock Holmes....
The 1930's and 1940's are spoken of as the "Golden Age of Mystery" but most of those mysteries were novel-length. The period from 1890 to 1920 was the Golden Age of mystery short stories and Robert Barr was a major player. He was a Canadian school teacher who started selling stories to the "Detroit Free Press" and then went to work for them. At the age of 31, he was sent to London to set up and manage the English edition of the DFP. He then started a magazine called "The Idler" which made waves by printing a spoof of the Sherlock Holmes stories. Some people were horrified, but Arthur Conan Doyle appreciated the brash young editor's chutzpah and even mentioned him fondly in his memoirs.
In addition to editing, the energetic Barr was a prolific writer and cranked out stories and novels in several genres. The always humorous but well-plotted cases involving the French detective Eugene Valmont are frequently found in anthologies of mystery stories from the Holmes Era and this book is a collection of them. It opens (as I suppose it MUST) with the story of how Valmont came a cropper and was booted out of the Paris Police Department. It's not a bad story, but the ones which tell of Valmont's career as a private detective in London are MUCH funnier.
Valmont is the Englishman's idea of a Frenchman - conceited, humorless, wily, and unethical. While living and working in London, he has frequent contact with Inspector Spenser Hale of Scotland Yard, who is the Frenchman's idea of an Englishman - dull, hypocritical, bumbling, and naive. The Canadian Barr seems to agree with both of them. The culture clash provides the entertainment, although there are some interesting crimes thrown in. My favorite is "The Absent-Minded Coterie" which uncovers a clever scheme that I suspect is as old as the human race. It's worth 99 cents by itself and I don't part with my pennies lightly.
The quality of the stories varies, but all are well-written and the best are out-standing. If you enjoy very early mystery stories, you shouldn't miss these. And the publisher has included two Sherlock Holmes parodies from the period. Indeed, when you think about Holmes' French ancestry and his monumental ego, every story in the book may be regarded as a Holmes parody. There but for the Grace of God goes....God.