Friday, December 9, 2011

Masters of the "Humdrum" Mystery


A couple years after the 1957 death of the great Golden Age detective novelist Freeman Wills Crofts, crime writer and critic Julian Symons in his Sunday Times book review column proclaimed "John Rhode" (one of the two most prominent pseudonyms of the extremely prolific crime writer Cecil John Charles Street) England's reigning "master of the humdrum" mystery.

Freeman Wills Crofts
John Street
For Symons, this title was not meant to be a complimentary one.  Symons used the term as as a way of dismissing English detection authors he saw as tedious and dull writers, focused entirely on the construction of "mere puzzles," rather than deeper explorations of theme and character (as Symons felt he was doing himself in his own crime writing, with such pathbreaking novels as The Thirty-First of February and The Colour of Murder).

Julian Symons
When some dozen years later he came to write his seminal study of crime fiction, Bloody Murder, Julian Symons argued that there was an entire "Humdrum school" of British detective novelists, headed by Crofts and Rhode but also including other writers, such as the husband and wife team of G. D. H. and Margaret Cole.  At other times he included such writers as J. J. Connington (Alfred Walter Stewart), Henry Wade (Henry Lancelot Aubrey-Fletcher), E. R. Punshon, R. A. J. Walling, J. S. Fletcher, Gladys Mitchell and Arthur Upfield on his Humdrums list.

Gladys Mitchell, Humdrum?
Some of these inclusions are to my mind unwarranted (whatever Gladys Mitchell may have been, for example, she wasn't "Humdrum," certainly not during the Golden Age, and Henry Wade is grossly underappreciated as a  literary stylist), but I dislike the entire assumption behind the use of the term "Humdrum": that writing puzzles, "mere puzzles" as they so often are smugly called, is an inferior literary art.  This is the sort of literary snobbery that Agatha Christie, the greatest puzzler of them all, frequently has been subjected to over the years.  I believe that constructing  a good mystery puzzle is a darn hard thing to do!

The greatest "mere puzzler" of them all: Agatha Christie
I wrote my new book, Masters of the "Humdrum" Mystery: Cecil John Charles Street, Freeman Wills Crofts, Alfred Walter Stewart and the British Detective Novel, 1920-1961 (to be published by McFarland Press in June 2012) in part to give a long overdue reappraisal of these "Humdrum" detection writers as accomplished literary artists.  Not only did they produce a goodly number of fine fair play puzzles, but their clever tales have more intrinsic interest as social documents and even sometimes as literary novels than they have been credited with having.

"J. J. Connington": third member of
the great "Humdrum" trimuvirate
Too often today is the Golden Age of British mystery writing defined exclusively by the four British Crime Queens: Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers, Margery Allingham and Ngaio Marsh.  While these talented and beloved women crime writers are of great importance to the study of the period, they should not be treated as the period's sole representatives.  As my study shows, the Humdrums were distinctive writers in their own right, actually quite distinguishable from their accomplished sisters in  crime.  They were, in fact, their own men.

Dorothy L. Sayers
Margery Allingham
Ngaio Marsh
My hope is that Masters of the "Humdrum" Mystery will entertain and inform readers but also provide us all with a fuller understanding of the history of the mystery genre during its Golden Age and its aftermath.

Link to McFarland's Masters of the "Humdrum" Mystery page:

http://www.mcfarlandpub.com/book-2.php?id=978-0-7864-7024-2

5 comments:

  1. I believe that Symons also dismissed Austin Freeman as 'humdrum'? Yet Freeman had arguably a more powerful intellect than Conan Doyle and his finest novels trounce, in ingenuity if not in characterisation, the best of Sherlock Holmes.

    It's a shame that Dr Thorndyke has vanished off the radar. Perhaps it's time to rehabilitate him as a humdrummer of genius :)

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  2. "I believe that constructing a good mystery puzzle is a darn hard thing to do!"

    That's an understatement! I have written two detective radio plays that were performed back in my college days. Although one was a parody and the other perhaps more of a thriller keeping the identity of the killer a surprise and sprinkling clues throughout the story was some of the most difficult creative writing I've ever done.

    Eagerly awaiting the release of the book. Been meaning to ask: are other writers like Wade and the Coles covered at all? Or are the discussions confined to the three in the subtitle?

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  3. John Yeoman, yes Symons indeed did! I talk about Freeman as the "Humdrum" founding father. Street, Crofts and Stewart all read him and his influence is clear on Street and Stewart in particular (in the use of meticulous science). Stewart deemed Freeman the greatest detective fiction writer since Poe.

    John, Wade and the Coles I have written 100+ manuscript chapter on, but they were cut to get the book down in size, plus it was felt to be somewhat confusing that I designated them "False Humdrums." I'm going to try to get a short book on them published separately.

    I have the greatest respect for a writer who can structure a clever mystery plot.

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  4. As a writer, I can say that it IS incredibly hard to write a good puzzle. Especially if you like to also do things with theme and character -- but you know, the masters of mystery fiction did some amazing literary work, and what's scary is that they did it so efficiently. And often very subtly.

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  5. Camille, in my book I found just summarizing some of these complex plots challenging, so I can imagine how challenging it is actually thinking them up and writing them down in the first instance!

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