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Ten years since it was first published in hardback, and now for the first time as an eBook, this volume of short stories by the cream of British crime writing talent celebrates 75 years of the quintessential Detection Club. The Detection Club represents the cream of British crime writing talent. Founded on the cusp of the 1930s, the Club's first President was G.K. Chesterton, and since then the mantle of Presidency has passed to some of the most significant names in the history of crime fiction, including Agatha Christie, Dorothy L. Sayers and Julian Symons. The Club meets three times a year - to dine, to plot, and to exchange ideas. This anthology includes eleven new stories by the Best of British: Robert Barnard, Lyndsey Davis, Colin Dexter, Clare Francis, Robert Goddard, John Harvey, Reginald Hill, P.D. James, H.R.F. Keating, Michael Ridpath and Margaret Yorke, and has been edited by the Club's President, Simon Brett. Among the authors are a number of bestsellers, as well as winners of both Diamond and Gold Daggers. This outstanding collection is a must for crime lovers everywhere.… (more)
User reviews
Simon Brett, who edited this collection, concludes it with a brief history of the Detection Club. Although he is the current president of the club, Brett seems oddly ill-informed about it: he doesn’t know precisely when it was founded—he thinks about 1928—and he thinks John Dickson Carr was “the only non-British author ever to have been a member,” even though he lists the Texas-born Patricia Highsmith as a contributor to the 1978 collection. The best Golden Age authors were members, including Agatha Christie, Dorothy Sayers, and G. K. Chesterton. The club has continued to attract the best British mystery writers.
P. D. James opens the book with a story that could as easily be classified as horror fiction as mystery; it’s a tale of revenge by one of the junior boys at St. Chad’s School against the upperclassman who tormented him, but this particular act of vengeance is deferred for forty years.
Michael Ridpath’s story is a clever one about a big banking outfit, a financial equivalent of John Grisham’s The Firm, that stages a murder to try to identify the best candidate to make partner. The fake murder, of course, turns into a real one.
H. R. F. Keating’s contribution tells what happens when a man walks into his bathroom one morning and finds a third toothbrush next to his and his wife’s.
There is a contest for the most ingenious story in the collection between Colin Dexter and Robert Barnard. Dexter’s story, called “Between the Lines,” is in the form of letters and diaries of three people who were present at a theft on board a train from Prague to Vienna. Two of the three are fledgling authors who accuse each other of the theft in drafts of stories about the incident. Only the third person, however, knows the whole truth. Robert Barnard’s entry for most ingenious story is called “The Life-lie,” and in it a murder in the Norwegian town of Bergen at the turn of the twentieth century is solved by none other than the playwright Henrik Ibsen. Barnard blends some historical fact with imaginative storytelling in this period piece.
Reginald Hill’s contribution features his regular, Detective Superintendent Dalziel of the Mid-Yorkshire Constabulary. It’s a wicked little tale about a young man who should have known better than to try to involve Dalziel in his nefarious plans.
Most of the stories are cleverly plotted and move rapidly, using interesting, sometimes multiple points of view as well as letters, diary entries, and other plot devices.
Contains
The Part-Time Job, P.D. James
Partnership Track, Michael Ridpath
A Toothbrush, H.R.F Keating
The Sun, the Moon, the Stars, John Harvey
'Going Anywhere Nice'?,
Between the Lines, Colin Dexter
The Life-lie, Robert Barnard
The Woman from Marlow, Margaret Yorke
Toupee for Bald Tyre, Robert Goddard
The Holiday, Clare Francis
Fool of Myself, Reginald Hill
My take
Most of these short stories are quick reads, about 20 pages long, and among the authors are a number of bestsellers, as well as winners of both Diamond and Gold Daggers. The stories appear to have all been written for the occasion, and are previously un-published.
I think the best were The Part-Time Job, by P.D. James and Between the Lines, by Colin Dexte