First of all - comments and suggestions are still pouring in for the post on compass directions and writers
Compass directions, a children’s classic, and is North best?
- keep them coming, and I will post again on the topic.
But in the meantime, there is the excitement of a new Agatha Christie adaptation, coming to Netflix on 15th Jan. It's The Seven Dials Mystery, one of the first of her books that I read and still a great favourite. You can find a long- ago post here (though not nearly as long ago as my initial reading of SDM) though there may well be another once I have seen the new version.
But in the meantime - here's an amuse-bouche, and backup for the historical view of Seven Dials and its past roughness. It is nowadays a very bougie part of Covent Garden
Patrick Butler for the Defence by John Dickson Carr
published 1956
The book begins with the death of a music-hall artiste, a magician. His widow Madam Cecile Feyoum is sorry about the death, but not heart-broken. She takes over his show and also takes over the middle of the book in a dramatic and very enjoyable femme fatale manner. She is appearing at a theatre in the aformentioned Seven Dials area and there is discussion of the changes over the years:
‘Seven Dials is a very small area between the top of Shaftesbury Avenue and the
top of St Martin’s Lane. Seven small streets come together, like
wheel-spokes, into a tiny little square. On one corner is the Oxford Theatre…’
‘Isn’t it a dreadful kind of
slum or something?’
‘Sixty or seventy years ago,
madam, your information might have been correct and uptodate.. In mid-Victorian
times it was the vilest of slums. Noted chiefly for poverty, fights, gin-shops,
harlots and ballads.’
This may well remind you of Agatha
Christie’s words, written in 1929:
Bundle sat
frowning. Seven Dials. Where was that? Some rather slummy district of
London, she fancied.
[This is confirmed by her friend Bill:] “Used to be a slummy sort of district round about Tottenham Court Road way. It’s all pulled down and cleaned up now.
[You wouldn't actually ever describe it as near the Tottenham Court Rd, in fact, given the many other names and roads you could pick to pin it down]
Not a million miles from Seven Dials is the famous Garrick
Club, which has recently moved into the 20th century by agreeing to
admit women as members. I have visited there as a guest of the Detection
Club. The eponymous Patrick Butler would seem to
be a member, and is quoted thus:
‘Useful contacts begod!’,
Patrick had once said, in the members’ enclosure of the Garrick Club. If a man
can’t succeed by his own abilities alone, it’s poor weak success he
deserves!’
I am going to take this as intended irony.
So. Patrick Butler. In 2024 I did a post on John Dickson Carr’s Below
Suspicion, a 1950 book featuring a barrister of that name, as well as regular sleuth Dr Gideon Fell. Butler is a character
who divides the fans – some people absolutely hate him. I think (someone will
put me right if I’m wrong) that that was his first appearance, and here he
comes again – this time flying solo.
He hooks up with a young solicitor, Hugh, and his fiancée
(on/off) Helen: they are in trouble. Hugh has found a client murdered in his
office, a room that was locked and unapproachable. He goes on the run with
Butler in tow, and they all range around Central London, avoiding the police,
investigating the case, and avoiding various organized crime villains. It is
non-stop – the action takes place over about 24 hours.
Let's get this out of the way. Carr often has very 3-dimensional
women characters, who have sex lives and their own morals. In this book, that
IS demonstrated – but unfortunately, Butler’s attitude to women is awful, and
involves actually smacking them, and seeming always on the verge of saying
‘they love it’ (all reminiscent of Anthony Berkeley’s problematic Wychford
Poisoning). It can be said that a) Butler is meant to be
awful and b) these attitudes wouldn’t have been seen as out of the ordinary at
that time. It’s a real shame, because the relations between Pam and Helen, and
Patrick and Hugh, are in some ways well-done and very interesting. Carr just
needed to go to a consciousness-training class or two, or to have been born 50
years later.
My friend JJ, over
at The Invisible Event blog, has written an excellent
post on the book, and this quote sums up the difficult aspects:
We’re very much in thriller
territory here — and decidedly bawdy thriller territory, too, with women taking
smacks and casual put-downs like it’s somehow pleasing to them — but while
lacking Carr’s purest rigour (and social attitudes that come from the later
half of the 20th century) there’s still much skill on display.
The other point about the book is that I had absolutely no
problem solving the crime – very very unusual with Carr. I kept thinking I must
be wrong, there must be more to it, but no. I should say, I hadn’t worked out
the exact way it was done (I thought I had, but I had underestimated the
difficulties) but I was pretty sure of the rest.
But – well I still enjoyed it. It clearly follows on from Below Suspicion and in fact spoilers it in 2 or 3 different ways, one of them very overt.
An astrakhan collar is worn by the dead man: ‘the
bloke’s theatrical overcoat with the astrakhan collar’. I've got a post upcoming featuring such coats, and their connection with the theatrical world, so we'll leave that for now.
I complained recently about the lack of females in Carr’s The
Ten Teacups: no such complaint here, despite not always
being happy by the way they are treated.
The splendid Madam Fayoum enters into the investigation and uses her magic tricks to confuse the police while wearing a post-performance red and
gold robe, and nothing else.
Later she turns up making a ‘brave show of leopardskin coat’.
So great clothes, theatrical setting, atmospheric London scenes - it has a lot to recommend it, with only a few attitude problems on the other side...
The
Red Kimono pictures are by George
Heidrik Breitner from Wikimedia Commons
Magic poster from NYPL




Oh, those attitude problems! I sometimes find it very hard to get past them, Moira. It doesn't matter tha they weren't unusual for the time, I still grit my teeth.... The one thing I thought about as I was reading your post was the way places change over time. Seven Dials certainly has (mind, I'm no expert - at all). And there are lots of other places, too, that have either fallen into disrepair or become gentrified. It's a really interesting topic!
ReplyDeleteYes, Margot, we all struggle with it a bit!
DeleteAnd I suppose attitudes, and views of what's acceptable, are always changing - along with those locations going up or down in the world
That's a heavenly robe. I keep seeing actors wearing splendid robes/dressing gowns/smoking jackets (Ian Carmichael as Wimsey, for instance), and wondering where one could get them now :-)
ReplyDeleteI know - they must be around somewhere but I don't know where!
Delete