English Mysteries Club discussion

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The Case of the Gilded Fly
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August 2012 - The Case of the Gilded Fly
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Tracey
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Aug 09, 2012 05:27AM

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I'm holding off on starting it for another week, just to have it fresh in my mind.






Did you know that The Case of the Gilded Fly was the only Crispin book to make the Guardian's "1000 novels everyone should read" list?




I just finished it last night; I really enjoyed it (view spoiler)


(view spoiler)

Thank you. It does make sense, or at least that was the killer's opinion of the victim; it didn't seem to be a universal feeling. (The universal feeling is that everyone's an idiot but Fen...)



That's the other big, big thing. (view spoiler)



My posts, however, may be all in lower case (call me archy) and might avoid s's.

Of course I think this was also the author's intention - Fen is MEANT to be annoying. I thought the idea of a detective counterpart whose passion is for literary criticism was too funny for words. And Crispin has an absolutely wonderful way with words. And he did put the most important clue, the red notebook, right in front of the reader, so he was playing fair in that respect.
The gilded fly, of course, is kind of a red herring.
A gilded red herring.


Then, he seemed like a Columbo character - acting as if he was a bit of a scatter brain. Although was it an act? It seemed real to me.
Bottom line, it was hard to warm to him as a character. Not that the main protagonist of the story has to be likable - they do not. But other things at that point have to be in play, and I just don't think the rest of the story made up for his lack of likability.
But just MHO. :-)

The literary allusions were what kept me in the novel - that was interesting.
And agree about the sexism. It was okay to murder her because she was a b**** and knew how to use her sexuality to get what she wanted. Very misogynistic. Not that I would defend women like her - she certainly isn't a sympathetic character - but obviously murder goes a bit too far. ;) And the fact that no one really cared that she was murdered.


I don't expect a novel from that era to be PC and I'm quite used to the casual anti-semitism and racism that crops up in pre-WWII crime novels. However, I found the violence of the misogynist sentiment and language in this novel to be very off-putting. It's not something which is found in Sayers or Tey, for example. It may just be the difference between the gender politics of a male writer from that period compared to that of the female writers whom I am more accustomed to reading.
ETA. Welcome to the group, Susan!

I don't expect a novel from that era to be PC and I'm quite used to the casual anti-semiti..."
I agree. And I think there is a big difference between being PC and the kind of misogyny we find in this book.
And it sad that we get used to the anti-semitism and racism in pre-WWII books - I am the same way. But I think that it is something that should always be pointed out in discussions as we are doing here with the misogyny.

Personally, I won't be rushing to read the next book. It was fine as these things go but it just didn't appeal to me as much as I thought it would. I did like the Oxford setting and the use of the rep theatre, but I didn't like Fen much especially his almost childish attitude to others who hadn't worked out who did it. I was however amused at how many marriage proposals there were over the course of the story. Otherwise, with it's cast of thousands it was a bit of a confusing mess with an obvious 'who did it' and an overly complicated 'how did it.'

I also got the impression that many of the points that irritate the reader (Fen's childishness and secrecy about the case, the sexism and callousness about the murder victim) were quite deliberately put there precisely to annoy readers. It reminds me of an essay about Jane Austen I did once for a professor who hates Austen - to this day (and he's on my Facebook) he may not realize that almost everything I wrote was designed to get his goat.
I did love Mrs. Fen. It was very odd to have a detective with this cozy, knitting wife and small children. I thing that was also an attempt by Crispin to wrong-foot the reader. In fact, I would say that what we have here is a case of the unreliable author.


Thank you very much for the welcome by the way. :)




I completely agree with you, Cherry.

I found the story to be OK but certainly not up to the standard of some of Crispin's other mysteries. If this is the only work of Crispin's you have read, I would suggest trying "The Moving Toyshop" or "Glimpses of the Moon".

I found the story to be OK but certainly not up to the standard of some of Crispin's other mysteries. If..."
I like them much better.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Five Red Herrings / Murder Must Advertise (other topics)The Moving Toyshop (other topics)
The Case of the Gilded Fly (other topics)