Death Comes at Christmas

We are well under way with the annual Clothes in Books trope of Christmas in Books – seasonal scenes from random books, for no better reason than I like looking for the pictures, and I and some readers find them cheery and Xmas-y (particularly, of course, those featuring murders and other miseries)

 

Dead Men’s Morris by Gladys Mitchell

published 1936

recently re-published under the title Death Comes at Christmas

 

 


They were wearing belts round their trousers, and cricket boots on their feet. On their legs, between knee and ankle, were fastened pads of bells. The pads were made of soft leather cut up and down to within an inch of the top and bottom of the pad, to give the bells more play. The men carried handkerchiefs and Morris sticks.

 

 


Republishing old mysteries with new Christmas-y titles is an odd idea, but one I don’t wholly condemn: there is apparently a huge demand for Christmas crime – great stocking filler or Secret Santa present – and you can’t blame publishers for trying to make the most of that. But there will be people caught out by this – buying again a book they have already read. And the idea of it is misleading: Amazon says ‘cosy up this winter as Amateur sleuth Mrs Bradley investigates a puzzling Christmas mystery’ which doesn’t for one moment describe the book in any way (nor any Mrs B mystery).




Very like the Mitchell book Groaning Spinney, which is now marketed as ‘Murder in the Snow: A Cotswold Christmas Mystery’.

In both books the early part of the story IS rather Christmas-y and enjoyable, but then the investigation goes on forever. ‘Nothing much seems to happen till suddenly the solution to a rather dull mystery is announced, to nobody’s great surprise’ is what I said before. In this one you can grudgingly say that in the intervening months – and yes it is months, the matter is not resolved until Whit weekend – you can find out a lot about pig farming and Morris dancing. And the climax at the Whit dancing display is actually quite exciting.

And there is much to enjoy. In a post on Angela Milne’s One Year’s Time, I was interested in how matter-of-factly she dealt with unmarried sex – and here there is a lot of it going on. There is some disapproval, but it’s quite relaxed. These are the assembled thoughts of the mother of the flighty Linda, Mrs Ditch, who observes, ‘without noticeable regret’:

‘Our Lender, she’m a betch….trapesen and trollopsen over the country to sleep in them there pegpens and woodsheds and the dear knows what an’ all…whestlen up they boys the way we’d a’ thought ourselves trollopsen ’ussies ef ever we’d dared to do likewise! But them! They’re bold as brass, and that there Lender the boldest!’

[I normally am very resistant to any phonetic rendering of rural speech, but I actually enjoyed it here. It was all quite Cold Comfort Farm]

It is clear that casual sex is involved in this, and that it isn’t that much of a big deal.

Mrs Bradley contributes a boar’s head to the Christmas celebrations, ‘At supper the boar’s head was the centre piece at table’ - a tradition that we looked at in this blogpost, with a lot more pictures.



The Morris dancing is a big feature – this is something that pops up on the blog now and again. Mitchell was obviously fascinated by folk customs – see for example her A Hearse on May-Dayand there is another excellent guest post on folk customs (ie not by me) here. There is a post called ‘Morris dancers just are funny’ here, and a different take on it mentioned in passing here. (again, a lot of good pictures in these posts).

There is a most surprising scene where the aged Mrs Bradley has to run for help:

‘She took off her heavy coat, her hat and her skirt, and tucked her silk petticoat into the top of her knickers. Then she set off, across country and through the wood, running as hard as she could in her quite outrageous garb’

[No, I didn’t even try to find a picture to illustrate that]

Her nephew Cary – the pig farmer – is splendidly described as ‘a young man in flannel trousers so thick as to give the impression at first sight that he was wearing bearskin leggings.’



I couldn’t find that either – but I did like this picture of pig farming, from an Australian magazine.

So plenty of interest, though with the usual Mitchell strangeness.

b/w picture from English folk dance society.

Modern Morris men (colour) picture by Christopher Thomond for the Guardian.

Comments

  1. I’ve read this and, as far as I recall, enjoyed it, though didn’t add it to the permanent collection, but the investigative process was VERY leisurely even for Dame Beatrice. I didn’t remember her cross-country run in her underwear!

    I have a bit of a soft spot for Morris dancing despite the all the mockery – though more for the Border style with the big sticks than the Cotswold style with the bells. GM’s Morris men would probably be horrified to learn that so many Morris dancers these days are (horror of horrors) female. I’ve never tried it myself – did attempt rapper sword whilst at university, which was fun but with the constant threat of serious shoulder injury …

    Sovay

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    1. I had to look up rapper sword, and now would love to see it! I am glad to be able to imagine you doing it...

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    2. For the most part, you should be imagining five people in a heap on the floor with their swords wrapped round their necks …

      Sovay

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  2. Can't say that the top photo exactly screams festive and cheery! Even if murder is on their minds!

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  3. I think Cary's daughter turns up in a later book, which also has a Morris troupe IIRC. Not Christmas-sy though. What I most remember about it is Death By Hog!

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    1. WAs it A Hearse on MayDay? She did like her folk customs

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    2. It was Death-Cap Dancers. The members of the dancers' troupe were victims, presumably not as a critique of their performance.

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    3. Not read that one. I was just looking at her entire list of titles, it is quite the collection. I think the list tells you entirely what to expect from her...

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  4. Just remembered that Joan Coggin's Dancing With Death takes place at a Christmas house-party, although it's a rather pathetic, post-war affair. Lady Lupin is an old friend of the hapless hostess. As far as I can remember, though, the dancing isn't of the Morris variety.

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    1. I must say I don't warm to Lady Lupin as a character, though I know she is quite popular.

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    2. Maybe because you are not partial to featherbrained women in literature?

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    3. Others might work for me, but I did just find her annoying

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    4. I find her pretty annoying too! Chrissie

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  5. I'm not surprised at all that this one's re-branded as a Christmas mystery, even though, really, it's not. As you say, it's what sells... At any rate, one thing I do like about the Mrs. Bradley mysteries, Moira, is that they do have interesting aspects to them, although as you say, they are unusual.

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    1. Yes, it's never going to be boring and predictable!
      And fair enough - we need people to buy as many books as possible 😊

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    2. She seemed like a "hit or miss" detective to me!

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    3. Above comment was about Lady Lupin,inworng thread.

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  6. Mrs Bradbury and Morris dancing - what’s not to like! In his spare time my late partner was a folk musician, and over the years we saw a lot of Morris dancing (and some clog and rapper) at festivals and other events around the Midlands. Occasionally he would be asked to help by playing his melodeon if a Morris musician was absent, which was always a bit tricky because the tempo has to be just right for the dancers!

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    1. Christine Harding9 December 2025 at 19:25

      That was me

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    2. Oh how interesting! Thanks for sharing that with us, and we'll expect more expertise and comment if they pop up again (which they will...)

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    3. In Death Cap Dancers, there was a lot of arguing over which instrument to play and whether the instrumentalist was playing it right. As their members were attacked, these problems grew....

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    4. Christine Harding10 December 2025 at 17:15

      That sounds intriguing

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  7. She is an acquired taste, perhaps, or so I have found. Mrs Bradley is a great character. Currently reading Winking at the Brim, in which a creature like the Loch Ness monster has just appeared in a fictional (I think) loch. Is it real or a fake? I have yet to find out, but honestly, with GM, it could be either.

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    1. I have quite a high tolerance for Gladys Mitchell as a rule, but was recently defeated by “The Longer Bodies” - unbelievable set-up in which a rich old lady decides to turn her relatives into Olympic athletes, deeply incomprehensible and annoying plot and not nearly enough Mrs Bradley to compensate. You never know what you’re going to get when you pick up an unfamiliar GM.

      Sovay

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  8. That was Chrissie

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  9. Death of a Fool/Off With His Head isn't Christmas-sy, but it revolves around a winter-solstice celebration with Morris dancing.

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  10. Did the Ruth Galloway series ever feature Morris dancing? I haven't read them all, but thought they had some folklore connections. Or maybe I'm just thinking of Ruth's druid friend.

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