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221 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 1952
The wisest man in American publishing at that time was someone called Victor Weybright, who published an extremely adventurous paperback series and had become something of a leader in the publishing world when he took the most untrashy of American novelists seriously as a mass paperback author: William Faulkner.Weybright had also made a mint off of Mickey Spillane - so he suggested to Vidal (blacklisted by The New York Times due to the homosexual love affair content in 'The City and the Pillar') that he take a shot at mystery. Vidal took that shot, three times, with rather rewarding results:
There were three Edgar Box books in all, each written in eight days at the rate of ten thousand words a day, and I lived on them for the next dozen years until I discovered live television, where I wrote a great many plays for NBC, CBS, and so on.Though he claims to have taken his main inspiration from Agatha Christie, Vidal proved to be something of a natural at crime writing.
...it is the world of unfixed money: obscure Europeans, refugees from various unnamed countries, the new-rich, the wilder old-rich, the celebrated figures in the arts who have time for parties and finally the climbers, mysterious and charming and busy, of all ages, sexes, nationalities, shapes and sizes. It takes a long time to straighten everybody out.These, and a host of others who populate these pages, are types that Vidal knew intimately. This may be fiction - and Vidal's protagonist may be straight - but the deft author is pulling from what he knew first-hand, while simultaneously revealing quite a bit about himself.
I have that happy faith in logic which only a liberal arts education can give.He's given a prima ballerina love interest - which makes things even dicier for him - but he also finds himself immersed in the homosexual milieu which, ironically, had landed Vidal in hot water with the New York Times. Maybe Vidal got off easy here because his main character is rather fiercely heterosexual. Nevertheless, this novel's penultimate action-shift is a delirious night ride that's straight out of 'La Cage aux Folles'.
"Of course I did not kill this vile woman but I tell you one thing: if I did kill her I would do such good job there be no talk of murder. I know ways," and looking like a real murderess she shut those Asiatic eyes of hers until they were like black slanting eyes drawn on her white face.There are three deaths in this first entry - the middle one is particularly gruesome. But even when there's no murder, Vidal keeps things taut as he keeps the reader guessing until the end. I'm looking forward to what else Sargeant and Vidal and Edgar Box get up to.
BABT
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06nnnly
Episode 1: Peter Sargeant, a young publicist, is invited to the offices of the Grand St Petersburg ballet.
2: Our narrator, Peter Sargeant, is beginning to get to know the members of the Grand St Petersburg ballet company. Their complicated relationships have already come to his attention when he overheard the conductor Miles Sutton threatening to kill his wife, Ella, the lead ballerina in the new ballet.
3: It becomes clear that Ella Sutton's death was not an accident. What is also clear is that one of the ballerinas is pregnant and the father of the child (as the whole company knows) is Miles Sutton, the conductor and widower.
4: At Peter's suggestion, Jane Garden - his new girlfriend - has stepped in to take on the lead role played by the murdered ballerina, Ella Sutton. In the meantime, Detective Gleason has some questions to ask Peter about 'the murder weapon'.
5: The story continues with the members of the Grand St Petersburg ballet anticipating the imminent arrest of the husband of the murdered ballerina. Not only had Miles Sutton been asking his wife for a divorce, he was also hiding a serious drug habit. Questions remain however over the murder weapon - the pair of shears found by our narrator, Peter, after the murder took place. The performances of the now sell-out ballet continue as does the investigation, and tonight a wealthy patron holds a party for the company.
6: There's shocking news for the cast of the ballet just as everyone is anticipating the arrest of conductor Miles Sutton for the murder of his wife. Peter Sargeant's role as a publicist is rapidly becoming that of detective.
7: With Miles Sutton's death confirmed as a gruesome accident, Detective Gleason declares the case closed. Peter is however a little curious as to why Mr Washburn had been writing letters seeking a replacement for Ella Sutton before she was murdered. Nonetheless they are all looking forward to the final performance in the first run of Eclipse.
8: Did she jump or was she pushed. Now there are three deaths.
9: Looks like the Russian contingent owns the murderer.
10: It would appear that Mr Washburn has decided to let Jane Garden take the fall. He is willing to see her arrested and have her reputation ruined even when she is found innocent, in order for the ballet company to continue its tour. Peter continues to piece together his theory of what happened, but time is running out. He needs to spend some time with Louis to find out what he knows. It's an evening that involves alcohol and a bathhouse.