Harry Carmichael was one of the pen-names of Leopold Ognall (1908-79) a prolific writer of crime novels in the post-war era. He wrote pacy stories that didn't outstay their welcome, and was for years a fixture in the prestigious Collins Crime Club list. One of his novels, Or Be He Dead, was shortlisted for an early Crossed Red Herring Award (forerunner of the CWA Gold Dagger) but he wrote too fast for most of his books to make a major impact. However, he was a reliable purveyor of fast, entertaining reads. The late Catherine Aird was a fan of his books and, kind as ever, she gave me a number of them.
Safe Secret, which dates from 1964, is one that I acquired because I came across an inscribed American edition, and there aren't many signed Carmichaels to be found - I suspect many of his books were destined for the library market. I'd say it's probably the best of his books that I've read so far, a clever and gripping story about a robbery that doesn't go to plan. The first chapter recounts the attempts of a 'man who called himself Graham' to establish a fake identity in a hotel. This is tantalising, and a possible explanation emerges in the next chapter, when a cashier called Richard Thornton goes missing along with a great deal of cash. From that point, things get progressively more complicated.
This is a novel featuring the insurance investigator Peter Piper and the hard-drinking journalist John Quinn. Their banter can be a bit tiresome, but there isn't too much of it, and they play off against each other (and a relatively tolerant cop called Hoyle) in an interesting way. Essentially, this is a novel of amateur detection, but handled in an unusual and satisfactory way.
There is a relatively small cast of characters, and one frustration is that two of the key people in the story remain more or less unknowable to the reader. But the story bowls along with twist after twist and the murders that are committed (one of them is, for plot reasons only reported to us belatedly, which perhaps diminishes its impact) add to the convolutions of the storyline. I've not read any other reviews of this book, but I thought it was a good one.