E.F. Benson is the author of my latest contribution to Patti Abbott’s series of Forgotten Books. He was a member of a famous family; his father became Archbishop of Canterbury, his mother was described by Gladstone as ‘the cleverest woman in Europe’ (blimey!), and his three brothers all achieved fame. E.F. (aka Fred) was a noted author, best remembered today for his humorous stories about Mapp and Lucia.
Fred’s work occasionally strayed into our territory, and The Blotting Book, published in 1908, is an example, and seven years earlier, he wrote The Luck of the Vails. Even though he did not feel the inclination to write any more crime novels, the Australian academic and crime expert Stephen Knight said, in his introduction to a paperback reprint of The Blotting Book in 1987, ‘he seems to have been briefly swept on the flow tide of the crime novel, as it developed out of the widespread popularity of the short story mystery.’
The setting is well-to-do Brighton and the book opens with a careful description of Mrs Assheton’s home in Sussex Square, where ‘everything moved with the regularity of the solar system’. But dark passions stir behind the façade of respectability. When murder is done, a suspect is arrested, and Benson offers a trial scene with a dramatic late twist. The pace is sedate – an all-action thriller this is not! - but the writing is smooth and capable.
Knight notes that ‘the shape of a short story grown into novel is quite apparent. Benson makes do with few characters.’ This militates against complexity of puzzle, but Knight suggests that Benson was paving the way for Anthony Berkeley/Francis Iles, and that in this book, ‘time and place are as important as they would be to the Detection Club.’ An interesting slice of historic crime, not to be forgotten.
Thanks for the information on Fred Benson, Martin. I'll see if I can find his books in the stacks at the library...
ReplyDeleteElizabeth
Mystery Writing is Murder
Mystery Lovers’ Kitchen
Sounds interesting - extremely interesting. I see that you mention his other crime novel, The Luck of the Vails which I own but haven't yet opened (so many books, so little time...) Have you read it?
ReplyDeleteHow well I remember Benson. Thanks, Martin. Hope you had a nice holiday.
ReplyDeleteBenson's a new name to me. Looked up "Mapp and Lucia" and was surprised to see how popular that series was/is. Sounds a lot like Wodehouse.
ReplyDeleteI love the 6 Mapp and Lucia books but haven't read any of his others yet - I will add them to my reading list.
ReplyDeleteThanks for these comments. Xavier, I haven't read The Luck of the Vails, but a well-read friend who did wasn't terribly impressed. Whether that was a harsh judgment, I don't know. Let me know what you think when you have read it.
ReplyDeleteI have this on my shelf and now must read it. I discovered EF Benson last year and think he is a most interesting character.
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