Murder by Burial by Stanley Casson
published 1938
I came across this green and white Penguin in a second-hand
bookshop in Bloomsbury in London, and was surprised I’d never heard of it. I
thought it must be quite obscure, but when I googled it there was plenty
online. Of particular note are items from two blogfriends: Martin Edwards’ blogpost
here, and Caroline Crompton’s
Shedunnit episode on Agatha Christie and the Archaeologists, which you can find
here Shedunnit - Agatha’s
Archaeologists - BBC Sounds
Shedunnit always a favourite round here anyway, but
this is a great edition, and she mentions Murder by Burial at the end,
giving us an absolutely fascinating direct line between Stanley Casson and
Agatha Christie – he was tutor to her 2nd husband Max Mallowan, and
indirectly is responsible for our favourite Golden Age couple meeting…
The book is an enjoyable oddity. It is completely steeped in
the ways and morals of a Golden Age detective story – my favourite line comes
from the young heroine:
Hilary gasped. “But surely,” she said, “decent men like X don’t behave like that!”
It also has a firm sense of place – both the village in East
Anglia, and Little Britain in the City of London (the description would apply today apart from the
mention of lorries going to the Covent Garden market). The archaeology and
history in the story are fascinating and informative: the author obviously had
a great interest in the pre-Roman Britain, and was anxious that the state of
the nation then should not be under-estimated. He also has a keen interest in
the politics of 1938: there is a huge concern with fascist-style organizations,
key to the plot, and Oswald Mosley is mentioned.
So it is a fascinating and enjoyable read with some very
funny moments. I particularly liked the architect who KNEW he was making a
mistake in his design for a ladies’ room, but took ages to realize what the
problem was: the urinals he had put in the plans. And when one man says ‘creating
a monument makes one feel like a verse from the Book of Genesis’
To which Hilary thinks ‘The Song of Songs is more in your
line young man.’
-which does also tell you that you are never in doubt as to
who are the nice and who the not-so-nice characters, and the book is
tremendously snobbish.
The crime involves the death of a nice sympathetic
character, in an apparent accident during the excavation. There is a diagram on
p208 of my book which I thought unique in my GA reading.
So it is all good fun, but it has to be said that as a
mystery there is nothing going on – no surprises or detecting, no closed
circles or locked rooms, not even an inverted tale. Just – no mystery. The
nearest thing to detection comes when one character parses another’s Who’s Who
entry to draw conclusions about him. ‘Do you think [his] book called Wild
Flowers of the Sierras is erotic or horticultural?’
But a good read all the same. Casson was a serious archaeologist himself – perhaps one of those 30s specialists/academics who enjoyed a crime story and thought ‘I could do that’. This was his only book. If you see a copy it is worth picking up…
I have greatly enjoyed finding archaeological pictures for
past entries, particularly those for Ellie Griffiths’ Ruth Galloway
mysteries: it is one of those areas where there are plenty of pictures
around, and I know where to look. Of course, any proper historian would
probably tut at my choices, as I do not match them to the archaeology in the
book under discussion. But in the spirit… so the top picture
is an excavation in Sweden in 1928, the second one a different Swedish
project, 1906.
Even without a mystery full of twists and suspense, the story sounds like ae good one, Moira. And I'm still chuckling about that architect! I do like stories where I can create strong mental images of whatever the author is depicting, so I like it that this one has a good sense of place. Glad you enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteThanks Margot, it was a good read, even if not the best crime plot! There was a lot to enjoy, and I really liked the setting.
DeleteIt does sound like fun all the same. I will bear in mind as I trawl second-hand bookshops. I suspect that I know which bookshop that was in Bloomsbury - perhaps the one I sometimes pop into myself. Chrissie
ReplyDeleteI bet it is the same bookshop! We should visit together, there was a very nice brunch place round the corner...
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