Next on the block is
Police Procedurals
; a genre I’ve never cared enough about to purposely read which is a little strange since my favorite shows are of the genre. A police procedural is detective fiction that follows the police/similar agency around as they investigate. Think shows like Law & Order, CSI, Castle, Dragnet, and Blue Bloods. I’m sure if you flick through the channels right now you can probably find one or two.
The Empty Hours by Ed McBain is about a woman found murdered in a slum apartment, surrounded by rich clothing and bank records indicating a vast wealth. The part of the solution is a familiar but the clues are arranged in such a way that it still takes a few chapters before the reader can see where the detectives are going with it. Of course, that could also be thanks to the abundance of thought derailments the story has to offer. My personal favorite is a three page comparison of the sun to a woman. It’s very poetic, and I think I’ll wind up typing it up to frame for that blank spot in my living room, but it hasn’t got a thing to do with the story. You’ll find yourself recognizing when the author starts to wander and just skipping whole paragraphs until he gets back to the plot. It’s a good one, but would probably benefit from trimming.
The Sound of Murder by Donald Westlake tells the tale of a little girl who wanders into the police station to report her mother for having murdered her step-father by making a big noise. The man has had recent heart trouble and is dead of a heart attack, and the girl now suspects her mother of also having been behind her biological father’s drowning death. It’s amazing how different the styles are between these short stories. Where TEH was overly dramatic this one is slow to start and finishes with an action scene like fireworks going off. The story is okay, but I’m starting to wonder if all the stories are this much of a production. My only problem is the character portrayal of the little girl, who comes across like a Stepford child or one of those creepy kids in horror films. There’s a reason for it, sure, but make it a little more obvious why don’t they.
Storm in the Channel by Georges Simenon is finally a story that is straightforward, with a solution that requires some thought, and has a simple wrap-up (and if the detective’s reasoning has a soupçon of sexism to it, it was such a refreshing tale after the dramatics of the last two that I’m willing to forgive and forget). The story is about a detective on vacation how is trapped in a small seaside B&B while he and his wife wait out a violent storm so they can continue on their holiday. When one of the servant girls is murdered he stems his boredom by poking his nose in the matter. I really enjoyed this one and there’s nothing bad to be said about it.
Murder in the Dark by Hugh Pentecost is a textbook case of a weak title; it tells you nothing but that the guy was murdered in darkness and leaves you with the expectation that this will be an important part of the plot, which it isn’t. I can rattle off plenty of more appropriate ones (Diamonds in the Dark, A Stones Throw, The Diamond Gamble, Diamonds for Dolly, and so forth). Anyway, a newly wealthy man is murdered and his newest purchase, a sealed box of uncut diamonds, is missing. This one reads like it’s trying to be a full-length novel. There are lots of twists and turns and a secret plot that everyone and their grandmother seems to be in on. There’s con after con piggy-backing each other and it just struck me as being too crowded a story for a novella. And the story first reads as though the detective is the main character so it’s a little jarring when you suddenly start following the main suspect around. Even more jarring is that this choice necessitates the main suspect being allowed to tag along after the police like a short-tempered lost puppy. An alright story with a tacked on romantic plot and too many bad guys.
The verdict? I like the clean lines of that third story enough that I’ll be looking up more of Georges Simenon’s work, but the rest try too hard. This compilation’s going in the recycling bin.