Furniture Watch: Amateur City by Katherine V Forrest

Amateur City by Katherine V Forrest

published 1984, published in the UK 1993

 


 

The Clothes in Books Furniture Watch is a feature I very much enjoy, and there is one word/furniture item that started it off.

Credenza is one of my key terms of fascination. Regular blog readers will know that when I start my series of books about a female private eye, she will be called Credenza ‘Chiff’Davenport *.

In a post  10 years ago on another 1990s crime story - this blogpost - I said

I was delighted to find mention of a credenza – I read a lot of American mysteries in the 90s, and they all featured credenzas, and I had trouble finding out what they were. I couldn’t Google it in those days…

And now - I think I have found the original inciting incident. I have been re-reading in the genre of gay crime books of the 1980s and 90s, inspired by my friend June Thomas’s wonderful book, blogpost here. I have particularly enjoyed the Kate Delafield mysteries by Katherine V Forrest. This is the first, and  features a murder of a horrible manager in an LA firm supplying office furniture. Each of the senior staff has an office, each is interviewed by Kate – and I would say each of them has a credenza. I was working it out from context back in the day, but I had never come across the term in UK life. It is still not generally used here, though there is a credence table (obviously the same root) in church scenarios.

a credenza desk

I think this was surely the beginning of my obsession with the word – the fact that it was thrown around so lightly, no explanation thought of or needed. It is, if you still don't know, a supplementary space where you might display your Salesperson of the month award, photos of your family, or extra files. (This is in office terms, there are other usages). I found a blissfully thorough webpage  giving the lowdown, in case by any remote chance you are as interested as I am. Where were you in 1993, when I first read this book, Office Furniture Warehouse? It has a Q&A section with 

Can I Use a Credenza as A TV Stand?  

How does a credenza complement an executive desk in an office setting?

*(I am equally fascinated by davenports, though there it is difference of UK/US usage, see here)

Back to the book: this is a great series. Kate is a terrific heroine and cop, and the books fit a lot in, although they are short. They give a fairly bad picture of 1980s life – misogyny, racism and homophobia in all areas – but they try to match that with interesting pictures of other aspects of life. Murder in the office doesn’t sound that promising, but I became fascinated by the layout of the place – there is a plan provided, with everyone’s offices marked, and I kept a marker on that page. The details of business life were all too convincing: ‘this company will be ready for a Martian in higher management before they’ll accept a woman.’ The victim is (luckily, so we don’t have to mind too much that he’s dead) particularly appalling, and the reports of the way he treated his underlings is horrific, but not, sadly, totally unbelievable. Things may not be perfect now, but they have improved.  

office life 1980s - the power suit

There’s a woman who was inveigled into having sex with him, regularly, and who claims it didn’t matter to her, and that was the only thing I found hard to take – she makes her case for how she got over it, but still…

Near the end, one character is fired. They lock themselves into their office, take over the loudspeaker system, and proceed to tell secrets about the other members of staff -  mostly expenses-fiddling and corporate politicking, some sex details: everyone gathers, horrified, trying to shut them up. This scene is worth the price of the book alone, it is quite splendid.

Woman at her desk is a theatrical producer, Nell Nugent, from NYPL.

Comments

  1. What is this wonderful, versatile and elegant piece of furniture, I wondered? I looked it up and it's sideboard! As is a chiffonier. And a buffet. I though the latter was just finger food when having a bit of a do. So much to learn in this world. Thank you, made my day and I look forward to reading Katherine Forrest, too

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    1. thank you! It's part of the joys books bring, sending a person off in unexpected directions 😉😉😉

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    2. Is this another UK/US difference? To me, a sideboard belongs in a dining room; it has drawers, and may have cupboards. It's where you keep silverware and linens, display plates, and lay out the buffet (food). But a credenza is always for the office.

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    3. Yes that's a sideboard. I think a credenza is similar size and shape, and in US is solely an office item. It's not a common term in Europe, but the word would just define the size and shape, not the usage! I thnk the idea of the piece of furniture, with that name, must have developed in US in 1970s/80s. If you look at usage it takes a sudden leap then!
      And older dictionaries don't have an entry for it: they have credence or credence table. Which I associate with church, but apprently has a side meaning - a wealthy person with enemies would have food on the credence to be tasted before they tried it... and after that they could have faith or credence in the food. It sounds slightly unconvincing...

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  2. I absolutely love the idea of a sleuth named Credenza, Moira! It's perfect! Thanks for this bit on the credenza as furniture, too. The family who lived next door to mine when I was growing up had a beautiful credenza, and I'm sure they weren't the only ones. As for the book, I must try this series. Offices can be effective settings for a murder mystery, and I like the sound of Kate as a character.

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    1. Ooh great personal information Margot! And I am sure you would enjoy this series.

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  3. Goodness yes...the Rise of the Credenza. I remember coming across the name, concept and actual object about midway through my corporate financial life (1972-2002). The execs and upper management had them in their offices. (As middle management, I did not have a credenza. Or an office.)

    I wonder if, when people today come across it in an older novel, it's akin to everyone's reaction to the word "chiffarobe" when it popped up in 1960.

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    1. There isn't even any agreement on how chiffarobe is spelled - there's chiffOrobe and chiffErobe too. and is it also the same as a compactum wardrobe, which had its moment but seems to have disappeared?
      I find my own fascination with the naming of furniture quite inexplicable, but am encouraged that others share it!

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  4. I have a credenza in my office! And here I’ve been all these years thinking it was just a desk extension to accommodate a printer …

    Does Credenza Davenport have a sidekick - Chester (short for Chesterfield) Ottoman maybe?

    Sovay

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    1. Chester Ottoman is a great idea. I think he has an unrequited love for Credenza, played out over many investigations.

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    2. He may also have a dog called Whatnot (rescue greyhound, given the spindly look of most whatnots) - though maybe that’s drifting too far into Comedy Crime territory …

      Sovay

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    3. Credenza pretends to dislike the dog, but secretly has a soft spot. I think she may have a cat called Breakfront.

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    4. Very appropriate in more ways than one!

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    5. so easy to get lost in a world of furniture.
      And now I'm thinking the sidekick could equally be Ottoman ('Otto') Chesterfield

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  5. Credenza is a much nicer word than sideboard, which I think is an equivalent.

    When I was working at a miserable law firm 12 or so years ago, often stuck there until midnight, I often considered how electronic card keys change the landscape of office murder mysteries. You can work around it by having someone purloin someone else's but one needs it so often, one would likely notice its disappearance and worriedly report it fairly soon. Not that I was planning to murder any of my coworkers exactly . . .

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    1. How very true - and every swiping of the card is recorded somewhere.
      Real book fans spend far too much time thinking of plot points that arise in real life - it would worry others if they could see inside our brains.

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  6. Ah, the eighties ... big hair, big shoulders, big earrings too. As for credenza and davenport, it really is one of those instances of two countries divided by a common language. The novel sounds great! Chrissie

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    1. I look back in astonishment at the clothes, but it was an interesting decade to be (relatively) young in!
      I found a website where a US academic looks at UK/US usage, in particular tracking when phrases cross over. It was riveting, I had to tear myself away. I must try to find it again, although it was the most tremendous consumer of time, perhaps not!

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  7. Wasn't Credenza Davenport on Time Team? To the art historian a credenza is an elaborate decorated chest, often given on marriage. Now for "vasistas", the transom window over a door. Useful for spying.

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    1. She should have been! When Googling them, the European ones are so beautiful and ornate and obviously just a completely different piece of furniture from the US ones.
      Vasistas - I feel she might be Credenza's mysterious young female assistant, with an unknown backstory which will slowly unspool, very good at checking people out, obviously.

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    2. Based on the sound of her name, I suspect Vasistas of being a cross-dressing Lithuanian chap …

      Sovay

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    3. I’d prefer a European credenza to the one I’ve got - could still put my printer on it with suitable padding. A small break front bookcase would be nice too, but I definitely don’t need a whatnot.

      Sovay

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    4. I think Vasistas can slowly become a more important character, as we find out more about his/her backstory.

      Whatnot - you can tell by the name: it is clutter and it attracts clutter.

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    5. Whatnots and knick-knacks are inseparable!

      They seem to be quite an international team - Chester/Otto must have Turkish ancestry, and Credenza ... Irish perhaps?

      Sovay

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    6. Credenza is Irish/Italian I think (obviously catholic), and the cultural differences with Otto would be a source of many jokes, and perhaps clues.

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