DAME AGATHA CHRISTIE AND HER PEERS
1966
I've read 3-4 novels by this author, and this is my favorite so far. First of all, cool title. But it's really tricky to write a book about a book that doesn't exist, or in this case a book about a stage play in which so little about the stage play is revealed. Or so you might think.
CAST - 4 stars: My favorite character is Mrs. Constantia Guzmann, a filthy rich, filthy ugly American who is actually a small player in this story. She tries to be 'owned' by the stupendously handsome Marcus Knight who lands the lead role of a stage play entitled "The Glove" within this novel, and her method is rather insane...and illegal. In a way, she drives the story though. Marcus lives with Destiny who plays a Dark Lady in "The Glove": she is characterized as being rather stupid but at the same time an excellent actress as a result of being short some tools in the shed. W. Hartley Grove is shady and supposes no one likes him, but in truth some characters do like him for this very reason. He might be gay but the author uses the term 'queer' in different contexts ((Hawkins, a watchman, 'turned queer at the site of blood"). Grove shares a dressing room with the precocious, rude 11 y/o boy, Trevor.) Marsh toys with this issue, oddly. Charles Random is just that, quiet and detached for most of the novel. Gertrude Bracey is rude and bossy. Trevor's mom is the neighborhood drunk. Knight, Grove, Gertrude, Random, Trevor, Destiny and Emily Dunne are the seven characters in "The Glove". Peregrine Jay wants to re-open the bombed out shell of a theatre as the director, writer. His roommate Jeremy Jones is to be the set decorator, costume designer and do about everything Jay doesn't do...and again Marsh toys with their relationship. Each have ex-girlfriends but odd references abound. A mysterious Vassily Conducis (compared by the author to Onassis) funds the restoration to the surprise of Jay. Jobbins is a night watchman, Greenslade a solicitor, and at about 100 pages in, Superintendent Alleyn from Scotland Yard enters the picture to guard...well, a certain lobby display about which the stage play is fashioned. I liked very much that Marsh sticks with the seven actors as suspects (that's a low number for a murder mystery) and for that, and making these seven characters interesting, I'm giving this element four stars. Marsh insinuates and insinuates, much of it just red herrings.
ATMOSPHERE - 4: About the bombed-out theatre: "A long shaft of sunlight from a gap in the roof...produced the effect of a wartime blitz drawing in charcoal and, like a spotlight, found its mark on the empty stage." Or, "The bar was all golden syrup and molasses in colour." Off to a party, one character grabs a domino. Now, if I hadn't just read Durrell's first two books in his "Alexandria Quartet", I'd have had no idea about wearing a domino. (It's a massive black velvet covering, worn over the head and hiding all identity and used during Alexandria's Carnival.) There is much in the way of reconstructing the theatre itself which I found fascinating. Then there are the players, playing their own games within the stage play itself.
CRIME - 4: There are several main crimes at the center of the story, none out of the ordinary and never boring. We get a hint of the global black market for historical objects, just enough information to understand how some of it works. And how Marsh weaves that in with the murder(s?) is exceptionally well done. And then there's the crime of...oh, I'd better stop.
INVESTIGATION - 4: Alleyn and his cop buddy Br'er Fox move quickly and of course interview all suspects together and apart. A particularly interesting scene occurs when one suspect is actually close to death in a hospitable bed but is visited by all cast members while the out-of-it patient drops off to sleep (patient medicated) just when a pertinent question needs to be answered. This little trick by Marsh is so much better than the typical reason people don't answer THE question in this genre: usually a phone rings, there is a knock at the door, someone MUST have some hot lovin', etc. We're taken all through the theatre, a backstage tour perhaps, revealing entrances and exits, stage tricks, etc. And this story HAS to take place 1) in a run-down theatre during 2)post WW2 bomb-ravaged London with 3) characters rich, poor, and between meshing together the investigation and atmosphere nicely.
RESOLUTION - 5: Of course great actors act in real life and are so good, everyone believes them even in real life, whatever that is. Marsh has written of stage plays and theatres and actors in other novels, and here she seems to get all the interplay games, on-stage and off, just right. I believed it all, every motive, every wink, every button pushed, the odd reason for the financing, an odd casting decision dictated by Conduci. And more. It seemed to me that all points/subplots are resolved, the explanation thorough. Even past references to a shipwreck explains a rather odd issue involving Conducis' dislike of pale gloves. It's a tiny detail, but Marsh explains it believably and sadly, thus going further than other authors in the murder mystery genre. Yes, the sexuality of some characters is left questionable. But isn't that the way it is in the real world today, given the sexual spectrum is so much larger than most people ever suspected?
SUMMARY - 4.2 stars. Marsh is indeed writing in Christie territory here as this book is fascinating. This is no "Murder on the Orient Express", but it's the best Marsh I've read so far and I think it's a vast improvement over her earlier novels. Even though Marsh never takes us through the stage play, "The Glove", the action and characters and a certain important item of apparel-that isn't a glove- reveals so much that we come close to understanding the play itself. And that's a trick very hard to pull off. I've been disappointed often by conspiracy-type thrillers about the hunt for a long lost book/play, etc., where the book/play is never found anyway, hence we are left with next to nothing. Here, we have everything we'd expect in a murder mystery...well, other than a jaw
dropping final twist.
(P.S. YES, there is indeed a killer dolphin...and yea, that is a good twist.)