Danger point by Patricia Wentworth
published 1942
I am filling in the gaps in my list of Miss Silver books read/blogged
on, and on re-reading this one I could see why I had missed it out – it is a
sad disappointment as a Miss Silver novel, even though it contains several
classic features of the oeuvre.
So – on the plus side there is a very distinctive coat, which
doesn’t suit the heroine: ‘all gay stripes and checks of green and yellow and
red on a cream ground.’
It is the subject of
some discussion. And to be fair, for a newish bride to overhear this
from an old friend of her husband -
‘Pity Dale doesn’t teach her how to dress. That ghastly
coat!’
Well anyone might quail.
But that’s not the point is it? The point IS that someone
else wearing the coat could be mistaken for its owner. And someone is going to
die.
Miss Silver is in the opening pages, and then disappears
till a good way through the book – that’s not always a bad thing but in this
case there is another issue, which is that she has no effect on the plot
whatsoever, does no investigating, uncovers nothing. She meets the heroine,
listens to her, and gives her some advice which is ignored. But she contributes
nothing to the case. This is most odd. The plot was perhaps intended as a
standalone and then Miss S was added? It is a classic of Wentworth World – a young
wife in jeopardy doesn’t know who she can trust. I don’t think it is a spoiler
to say there is an extremely small number of people in the frame for villain,
and when it comes down to it you choose between two, with absolutely nothing in
the way of clues or genuine sleuthing.
On to the patent Miss Silver Checklist (compare with previous lists elsewhere on the blog)
I will start with knitting, not because it is particularly important here, but because it gives me the chance to make a most splendid recommendation. Blogfriend Aubrey Hamilton has produced a wonderful article about Miss Silver and knitting - she wrote it for The Mystery Readers' Journal, and you can find it on her blog here. It is highly recommended - and lists all Miss Silver's knitting projects.
My addition is a comparison with Gladys Mitchell's Mrs Bradley in St Peter’s Finger – Mrs B takes out her ‘mangled length of knitting’: she is knitting ‘a shapeless garment slowly and very badly’. She does ‘some rapid decreasing which she felt she would regret later on’. You would never get that with Miss Silver.
Because of her non-appearance, the cough-count is
very low - Miss Silver coughs 13 times.
The weird names: A
small but perfect haul. The married couple at the centre of the story, Lisle
and Dale Jerningham, have about the most archetypical Wentworth names ever. You
can just roll those names over in your mind can’t you? And do you know for
sure which is the man and which the woman?
Not much in the way of ladylike occupations,
although in this book as in the recent
read from Gladys Mitchell, St
Peter’s Finger, a busybody lady tries to help a low-class young woman by
finding her a job with a friend, helping looking after children. (In one case
this is successful, in the other it never happens) Perhaps this was a standard
trope of the time.
Unusual words: ‘privet whiteness of
neck and cheek’ – I would expect privet to be green, but apparently the flowers
are white.
‘He felt a pringling in his bones.’ A rare word (although it
seems to have taken on a recent modern meaning) but you feel you can understand
the sense of it.
There is a lot about clothes, apart from the
distinctive coat, but nothing of great interest: there is a peripheral
character who dresses very vulgarly, but somehow I had lost the will to search
for that. Lisle is very fair (washed out by the sound of things, and no wonder
with everything that is going on) so a lot of very tasteful frocks in pale
linen. Frankly the ‘ghastly coat’ sounds as though it would cheer things up.
Altogether, an undistinguished outing from Miss Silver.
Suit from the Ladies Home Journal. Dress – ‘straw-coloured to match her hair’ – from a
French fashion magazine of the era. Coat from NYPL.
So convenient for avoiding spoilers in later books that both the men have the same last name. But to be fair, anyone who has read a lot of Wentworth can see a major hint in the the Jerningham's sleeping arrangement who is the bad guy.
ReplyDeleteI also found it amusing that Miss Silver contributes nothing in this one.
Glad it wasn't just me, and great point about the names, that made me laugh.
DeleteThat is really odd that Miss Silver has so little role in this novel, Moira. You have a good point that perhaps she was added in as an afterthought for some reason. Oh, well, at least there are some coughs. At any rate, I can just picture that coat! And that snide remark about it, too... It sounds as though there are a few good things in this one, even if Miss Silver isn't one of them - well, not really.
ReplyDeleteYes, we don't got to Patricia Wentworth or Miss Silver for big surprises. They are the ultimate comfort reads
DeleteI did guess the villain in this one. He was acting pretty strangely. And I just liked the other guy a lot better!
ReplyDeleteYes, sometimes the heroes are not that attractive to modern eyes, but they can be attractive....
DeleteI reread this one not long ago and wondered why Wentworth had so many wimpy heroines when she does spunky ones so well. Why not allow the wet blankets to be murdered?
ReplyDeleteThat's an excellent point indeed.
DeleteLisle seems an odd name, as I would always associate it with sensible stockings. Incidentally I googled lisle stockings, just to check they were what I thought they were, and came across an informative blog post from the Otago Museum in Dunedin, quoting your Guardian article: https://otagomuseum.nz/blog/locking-in-a-day-for-nylon-stockings/
ReplyDeleteYes indeed, stockings. And Wentworth liked the name - there is another Lisle in the Chinese Shawl, and Lyle as a last name too.
DeleteI am entranced by your discovery of that blogpost, which I was wholly unaware of. It has reminded me of stocking-theory, very useful as I am going to be talking about clothes detection in Agatha Christie soon.
Cannot mention lisle stockings without also mentioning one of my all-time favourite blogposts, on one of the most unknown books, which was triggered by thoughts of lisle stockings https://clothesinbooks.blogspot.com/2015/04/dress-down-sunday-clue-in-castle-by.html
I do wonder whether Wentworth was thinking of the German name Liesel and didn't realise she had misspelled it....
DeleteOh that hadn't occurred to me, I wonder if you are right?
Delete