Third in a short series about Bingo Riggs and Handsome Kusack, a pair of photographers who stumble into trouble, by Georgiana Ann Randolph Craig, who wrote under the pseudonym Craig Rice, “The April,Robin Murders” is set in Hollywood. The Sunday Pigeon Murders (1942) and The Thursday Turkey Murders (1942) were the first two in the series. Ed McBain apparently completed this one after Craig’s death at 49 in 1957.
Bingo and Handsome are the epitome of amateur detectives. The pair are naive fools, yokels if you will, who stumble upon trouble as if it’s their middle name.
They are photographers, in Hollywood to set up a new business, and become rich and famous. They start out in a rundown strip motel and soon meet a guy Courtney Budlong at a star map stand who sells them the home of former star April Robin. Alas, after they part with their $2,000 deposit and sign all the property papers in about ten minutes, move in, and meet the neighbors, they find they have been had. There is no Courtney Budlong and no one has a right to sell them the house.
What’s more the April Robins house has its own mysteries such as the fact that the owner has disappeared nearly seven years earlier and is Peru,ed dead. It has long been suspected that the body is buried somewhere on the property as well as a whole bunch of money, but no one has ever found the body or the treasure. The fifth wife disappeared shortly thereafter after she became the prime suspect. The fourth wife then appears and wants to know who gave. Bingo and Handsome leave to camp out on the property. She’s waiting out the seven years to collect years of unpaid alimony from the estate.
To top it off, the maid/caretaker dies under mysterious circumstances and the police think Bingo and Handsome are prime suspects and do not believe their tale of having been sold in a day the property by nonexistent Courtney Budlong.
In short, The April Robin Murders is a farcical tongue-planted-in-cheek mystery that doesn’t quite take itself too seriously and has a pair of bumbling amateurs as the lead characters.