John Dickson Carr was born in Uniontown, Pennsylvania, in 1906. It Walks by Night, his first published detective novel, featuring the Frenchman Henri Bencolin, was published in 1930. Apart from Dr Fell, whose first appearance was in Hag's Nook in 1933, Carr's other series detectives (published under the nom de plume of Carter Dickson) were the barrister Sir Henry Merrivale, who debuted in The Plague Court Murders (1934).
3.5 This later Carr novel is a historical mystery set in 1912. A lot of the people and places mentioned are real, giving the book a bit of grounding in the real world. The mystery is quite good and solid Carr with a seemingly impossible crime, but my goodness it took a long time to get to it! And Carr's characters like to talk. And talk.
Solitamente i romanzi di Dickson Carr sono quelli che adoro per via del suo stile, intrighi, misteri e indagini a seguire ma questo romanzo... mi ha abbastanza delusa. Descrizione dei personaggi ben fatta sebbene durante le indagini dell'omicidio, i vari personaggi erano molto strafottenti e vaghi, persi nella loro vita che nel scoprire il vero colpevole. Noioso e quasi statico, dinamico forse per qualche riga e quando si pensa che la storia ha raggiunto una svolta, ecco che si ricade nella tediosità del racconto...
There's a point where Carr's mannerisms – the inconsequent remarks, the constant interruptions at crucial moments of near-revelation, the characters' sometimes baffling indifference to danger – become outright defects. This book is past that point. (Also, the story's cavalier attitude towards pedophilia is pretty damn jarring.)
I'm a little conflicted about how to rate this book. It was intriguing, though not very innovative. I liked it mostly because the author grew up in the era just after this novel takes place, so the setting was almost familiar to him, and he has a somewhat old fashioned style. It moves along at a good pace, has real places and a few actual people, though the story is fictional.