Londra. Anni '30. Lord Carpenter, magnate della carta stampata e padre padrone del «Mercury», viene pugnalato a morte nel suo ufficio di Fleet Street. Il delitto è avvenuto proprio mentre il quotidiano si preparava, in gran segreto, a sferrare l’attacco finale nella sua campagna di propaganda contro l’Unione Sovietica, pubblicando un articolo che avrebbe probabilmente spinto il Paese alla guerra. La faccenda suscita grande sensazione, mettendo in allarme anche il governo, e la polizia arranca tra i depistaggi. Il giornalista Charles Venables, che scrive di cronaca nera per il «Mercury», decide allora di condurre un’indagine parallela: del resto, il suo spirito arguto e il suo monocolo lo rendono un perfetto – per quanto bizzarro – investigatore dilettante. Tra le lusinghe della bella ed elusiva Miranda Jameson, amante di Lord Carpenter, e i criptici proverbi orientali di un corrispondente cinese che sembra sapere molto più di quello che dice, Venables sfiderà l’ispettore Manciple di Scotland Yard nella risoluzione del caso. Si troverà così a indagare su politici, arrivisti, donne misteriose e perfino su una cellula rivoluzionaria comunista nascosta nel cuore di Londra. Ma la sua attenzione si concentrerà soprattutto sui colleghi del giornale: ciascuno di loro nasconde qualcosa, sono abili professionisti abituati a raccontare storie e pronti a tutto pur di sbattere un colpevole in prima pagina.
Christopher St. John Sprigg aka Christopher Caudwell was a British Marxist writer, thinker and poet.
He was born into a Roman Catholic family, resident at 53 Montserrat Road, Putney. He was educated at the Benedictine Ealing Priory School, but left school at the age of 15 after his father, Stanhope Sprigg, lost his job as literary editor of the Daily Express. Caudwell moved with his father to Bradford and began work as a reporter for the Yorkshire Observer. He made his way to Marxism and set about rethinking everything in light of it, from poetry to philosophy to physics, later joining the Communist Party of Great Britain in Poplar, London.
In December 1936 he drove an ambulance to Spain and joined the International Brigades there, training as a machine-gunner at Albacete before becoming a machine-gun instructor and group political delegate. He edited a wall newspaper.
He was killed in action on 12 February 1937, the first day of the Battle of the Jarama Valley. His brother, Theodore, had attempted to have Caudwell recalled by the Communist Party of Great Britain by showing its General Secretary, Harry Pollitt, the proofs of Caudwell's book Illusion and Reality. Caudwell's Marxist works were published posthumously. The first was Illusion and Reality (1937), an analysis of poetry.
Caudwell published widely, writing criticism, poetry, short stories and novels. Much of his work was published posthumously.
Questo libro non è un giallo in puro stile 'classico' o della golden age. Mescola nella sua trama parti riguardanti la politica del tempo, lo spionaggio, l'influenza dei giornali nell'opinione pubblica, tutte cose in sé molto interessanti, ma che a me sinceramente piacciono poco in un giallo di genere. Perciò non ho amato molto la parte centrale del libro con gli intrighi su cellule comuniste sovversive e compagnia bella. Alla fine la parte processuale, però, ha risvegliato il mio interesse e quindi il voto finale è più che positivo. Una cosa non mi è andata giù: il movente del colpevole!
A most interesting and unusual detective novel, the second of four which feature the crime reporter/amateur detective, Charles Venables. Although first published in 1933, it is set forward in time in 1938, with an economically restored Russia rivalling Britain.
The murder victim is the hugely unlikeable newspaper proprietor Lord Carpenter, killed when about to launch a campaign to bring certain war with the Soviet Union. There are plenty of suspects, including Venables himself, and the Prime Minister, who were in and around the crime-scene at the vital time.
Detective Inspector Manciple does his best to sort out the various clues and motives, but it is Venables who comes up with the solution which is very ingenious and unique, although a famous novel of the following year would take the idea a lot further.
The trial towards the end, especially, has amusing moments, and there is a good general sprinkle of humour about newspapers, politics and human relationships.
I like Venables rather more than Peter Wimsey to whom, for some readers, he appears to bear a resemblance which I deem superficial at best.
The premise of this story is that a media mogul who has used his resources to agitate war with Russia has been murdered just before his big news story breaks that will most certainly cause an actual war. The suspects are among a closed group of people who never left the news office. Who did it? Venables & Detective Inspector Mancible aim to ferret it out. Detective Inspector Mancible said, "Now let us get down to business: at 11:25 p.m. you left Lord Carpenter. He announced his intention of going to sleep, and apparently did so. Between that time and say 1:45 a.m. he was stabbed. The weapon, so far as one can see at present, is this dagger, which was replaced on the wall, and which still, though wiped, bears minute traces of blood. There may or may not be fingerprints on it."
A rare book by Christopher St.John Sprigg who in 1933 plotted a mystery set in 1937 of a murder that stops a war between England and Russia. The plot is good but Sprigg,s vision of the future makes it special.