Death of an Author by ECR Lorac

 Death of an Author by ECR  Lorac

published 1935




 

He found himself in a long low room, furnished as a study. A kneehole desk stood at right angles to the window, on his right as he stood looking round; in the wall on his left was a fireplace with an electric “log fire,” a big easy chair on either side of it. Facing the window was a typist’s desk, with the typewriter neatly covered; bookshelves, well filled, covered most of the walls to half their height, and a few etchings hung on the creamy space above the bookcases. It was all perfectly neat and peaceful; the parquet floor was polished, the rugs in place, and there was no indication of the unusual

 

A rather idealized writer’s study perhaps? This book has a lot to say about authors, and has some splendid Golden Age quotes in it:

“James was a pretty lively fellow, a good hand with a gun and a line, and a rare runner after petticoats.”

“While your mind harps continually on hard facts, mine goes a-whoring after its own inventions, as the psalmist has it”

The study description, and those two quotes, would definitely have me thinking the writer was a man.

ECR Lorac is a Golden Age writer who has been sneaking her way back into the public eye over the past few years, and with good reason – she wrote a ton of books, of very varying styles and some variation in quality, but in amongst them there is something for everyone. (Three of her books have appeared on the blog already: Two way Murder, Accident by Design, Bats in the Belfry)

Famously, she was generally assumed to be a man, writing under the ECR Lorac name: she also experimented with other names. It wasn’t a spy-level secret, but still, when this book starts with a well-known crime author, one with a unisex name, turning up at an event as a woman – well, our ears prick up.

She was dressed in a well cut blue suit, with a light blue shirt and dark tie

 

There is some discussion about whether a reader can always tell the gender of a writer, and this is argued out at some length, although, honestly, it is not all that relevant to the plot. But presumably was a consideration of Lorac’s.

Death of an Author is hard to describe – it is perky and unexpected, and I defy any reader to predict what the next turn in the plot will be. The plot then goes off in other directions: with the disappearance of a male writer, with suspicion cast on another writer. Eventually a body turns up a long way from London – who is it, and what is the history of this tangled set of people? Speedily and lightly, Lorac offers more ideas and variations – they’re not twists, but alternate hypotheses about what is going on. It skims by (raising some questions when you think about it later, but never mind that) but is very easy to read and to enjoy.

 


Vivian Lestrange was dressed in the simplest of black georgette frocks, which fitted her slender body like a bud sheath. Her arms and shoulders were victoriously white, and her golden head so well shaped, that Marriott—who hated ‘mannish’ women—had to admit that the boyish crop became her.  She wore long earrings of deep blue lapis lazuli… her lips were reddened to just the degree compatible with artistry, and her skin smoothly powdered so that it had a damask quality.

It has a strange similarity with Christopher Priest’s 1995 book The Prestige, which was turned into a film by Christopher Nolan in 2006, long before he got busy with Oppenheimer. Both film and book are excellent, on the blog here, (and have a supernatural dimension not in Lorac’s style) and they make you think a lot about brothers, which the Lorac does too. Can’t really say more. 

The picture of a man at his desk in his study actually shows the Governor of the Seychelles, from the UK Archives, but  it had a look of an author at his work.

Daytime outfit from the NYPL. Evening dress from a fashion magazine of the era.

Comments

  1. I love those GA quotes, Moira! And I am glad Lorac is being re-discovered, if that's the word. She did write some good novels, and I like her sly wit. I do wonder how some authors get 'forgotten' for a long time, and others don't. In Lorac's case, it wasn't for lack of talent, in my opinion.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Margot - and you are spot on as always. Who 'survives' is a mystery, but Lorac certainly deserves it.

      Delete
  2. Coincidentally, Martin Edwards recently posted a review of a GA mystery whose author's gender is still a mystery!

    Sarah Caudwell's contemporary series of mysteries has a narrator named Hilary Tamar, an Oxford scholar whose gender has never been revealed in the books. In fact the narrator has said in one of the books that his/her gender has no bearing on the plot, so needn't be given. I think I've thought of Hilary as female though, simply because of the author's gender.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Good call Marty. I'm a huge fan of Sarah Caudwell's mysteries - the first, Thus was Adonis Murdered, would be in my top 10 crime books ever. I read them as they came out, and in those days there was no opportunity to discuss them with others or find fellow-fans, so I used to wonder if it was just me who was intrigued by Hilary's gender!

      Delete
    2. I've always seen Hilary as male - partly a general impression based on how he/she deals with the world, but also because of a specific incident in Thus Was Adonis Murdered.
      Sovay

      Delete
    3. OK, going to have to tell me what the incident was please.
      I'm always surprised that it didn't bother me more, not being certain, I'm often not a fan of that kind of thing, but she got away with it. But I think he was male if I really had to pick...

      Delete
    4. The incident ... Hilary is in The Corkscrew with Timothy, Selina and Ragwort, and Timothy is called over to the bar to take a phone call; he returns with alarming news about Julia's predicament in Venice, and with a fresh bottle of Nierstein from which, in a state of distraction, he tops up his own glass and Selina's but not Ragwort's and not Hilary's. Everything about Timothy indicates the courteous, slightly old-fashioned, conventional young man who's been brought up to treat women with chivalry and if Hilary were a woman I firmly believe he would have poured her a drink (though if he'd missed out Selina too that would have been a different matter).

      I have three copies of this book with different covers, and on the back of one of them the artist Paul Cox (who clearly didn't get the memo) has included a male Hilary.

      Delete
    5. Oh that's a very good clue, and very convincing, and worthy of Sherlock/Lord Peter.
      I always thought the Corkscrew was meant to stand in for El Vino's - which until the early 1980s had restrictions on serving women. That both suggests Hilary was a woman, and also slightly surprises me that Sarah C was supporting this old-fashioned place.
      Such different times - reading them when they were new, I was fascinated if it was just me, and I was being foolish, I wondered what others thought - nowadays you'd log on and ask the world, but back then I didn't know a single person I could discuss it with.

      Delete
    6. I read the whole of Thus Was Adonis Murdered without even noticing, let alone being bothered by, the ambiguity - possibly because I'd subconsciously decided very early on that Hilary was male. I rather resent the conceit now because it must have been one of the factors that made Sarah Caudwell write so slowly; if she'd just given him/her a gender there might have been more books ...

      I'd also heard that El Vino's was the model for the Corkscrew, though I don't remember the Corkscrew making any difficulties about serving Julia.

      Delete
    7. Oh if only there'd been more books in the series! It was so sad when she died.
      And indeed - I can't see Selina and Julia standing for any nonsense in the winebar.

      Delete

Post a Comment