The Layton Court Mystery by Anthony Berkeley

 

The Layton Court Mystery by Anthony Berkeley

published 1925

 

 

random female pic to represent characterless women in the book

 


I was listening to the latest Shedunnit podcast, which featured two (2!) of my good friends – Caroline Crampton, and Jim Noy of the Invisible Event blog

The Sanfield Scandal (Green Penguin Book Club 14)

and Jim mentioned in passing that he considered The Layton Court Mystery by Anthony Berkeley as the first country-house-party mystery.

He’d recently blogged on the book, very enthusiastically,

#1415: The Layton Court Mystery (1925) by Anthony Berkeley [a.p.a. by “?”] | The Invisible Event

So it definitely felt like time to read it.

[btw, Caroline and Jim were discussing a book by Richard Keverne, whom they consider no-one has heard of. Obviously they - weirdly - haven’t been spending their time revisiting CiB’s 2013 menu to find this

The Man in the Red Hat by Richard Keverne

which had a handy picture I have copied for the top of this entry]

So – Layton Court was the first book to feature Berkeley’s series sleuth Roger Sheringham, whose main character trait is being annoying – though this is plainly a decision by the author, Berkeley is not enamoured of his own detective in the manner of Sayers and Wimsey. (Annoying detectives – that feels like something we should be making a list of). Sheringham says to a policeman “I’m extraordinarily interested in all this. You’ve no idea how useful it will be if I ever want to write a detective novel.” By later books, he is exactly such an author, I believe - in this book he is apparently a 'straight' novelist. (I'm not completely sure about all this, but one of my expert friends will put me right if I am wrong)

And the main thing about the book is that it is full of VERY familiar tropes, but you have to keep reminding yourself that most of them are coming up for the first time – Berkeley invented them.

Sheringham is a guest at a country-house weekend, along with his good friend Alec, a young woman called Barbara, her mother, and another woman Mrs Plant. There is a butler and a gardener (and doubtless other staff, but we are not concerned with them).

Their host, Victor Stanworth, is found dead in the library in the opening scenes. The doors and windows are locked, and it is assumed he committed suicide.

No modern reader is held up by this, but it takes till p75 for Roger S to suggest that it may be murder, and to solve the mystery of the broken vase – what could possibly have hit it with sufficient force…? (answer, in case you’ve never read any crime books: an extra bullet)

There is blotting paper with clues, there is a safe that some people are very worried about, there are keys to be found. Might there be a secret door or a priest’s hole? Someone goes down to the library in the middle of the night to get a book, always a favourite round here.

On p195 Sheringham realizes the truth about Stanworth, which again I think most people will have thought of a long, long time ago: motive etc provided. I may say that the identity of the murderer was not in much doubt in my mind from a very early page, but there were aspects to admire in the concealment.

There are some quite funny moments – I liked this

It would have made a striking epitaph, he felt. “Sacred to the memory of X, who died, greatly regretted by everybody, especially his chauffeur, who wanted the day off.”

And there is an excellent diversion where Roger and his friend search for a mysterious stranger by the name of Prince, with a most enjoyable result. I mean, you know it is llikely to be a wild goose chase, but the exact manner is splendid.

Roger’s insult for his friend is that he is a ‘sponge-headed parrot’, which I feel we could all use with pleasure. Along with his expression of surprise.“Jumping Moses!” Roger exclaimed blankly. “That appears to bash me somewhat sideways!”

The mysterious Mrs Plant is having no  nonsense from Roger:

“You will allow me to say that I consider your conduct presumptuous and impertinent in the highest degree. I should be obliged if you would kindly refrain from making me the target for your abominable lack of manners in future.”

And so say all of us.

There’s a promising character in the dead man’s sister-in-law, Lady Stanworth

Roger [was] feeling unaccountably small. Lady Stanworth was perhaps the only person in the world who consistently had that effect upon him.

But we have seen almost nothing to justify this – Lady S IS rather Lady Bracknell-ish, but she scarcely appears. Berkeley could have spent a bit more time doing spiky dialogue for her rather than the endless repetitious discussions between Roger and his friend Alec.

And this brings me on to another aspect. So many tropes from this book are very familiar from so many later books – but the worst can be summarised as ‘all the good men were at school together, and there are no women characters.’ The females are all absolute ciphers, and the men….

“But it’s out of the question!” Alec burst out impulsively. “Jefferson—I don’t know anything about him, though I should certainly have set him down as quite a decent fellow and a sahib, even if he is a bit reserved. But Mrs. Plant! My dear chap, you’re absolutely off the rails there. Of all the obviously straightforward and honest people in the world, I should have said that Mrs. Plant was the most. Oh, you must be on the wrong tack!”

What he is basing his view of Mrs P on is another mystery.

A young woman, Barbara, has this description:

The girl who was advancing across the grass was small and slight, with large gray eyes set wide apart, and a mass of fair hair which the slanting rays of the sun behind her turned into a bright golden mist about her head. She was something more than pretty; for mere prettiness always implies a certain insipidity, and there was certainly no trace of that in Barbara Shannon’s face.

But that’s the end of her more or less.



(the picture cried out to be used, but is the cover of an Edgar Wallace book, so I have erased his name so there is no confusion)

In this respect the book reminded me of both Trent’s Last Case by EC Bentley, and The Red House Mystery by AA Milne, as well as many later books.

Shedunnit, and Trent’s Last Case

The Red House Mystery by AA Milne

-       Again it seemed reasonable to copy a picture…all-purpose early1920s people looking at the plans to see if there is a secret tunnel. That's not what they are actually doing, but it seems ideal to keep on hand for books of the time.


We do get this, to show Roger as unusual:

Roger was in the habit of disregarding the convention that a man should never under any circumstances display emotion in the presence of another man, just as heartily as he violated all other conventions.

But – my friend Curtis Evans, Golden Age guru, once wrote about ‘the idealization of the learned professional class’ amongst crime writers – he was talking about PD James just for starters, and it is so recognizable, rife in her books. But there is also the idealization of the posh upper-class people in GA books, which also annoys me. There is a shared aspect of this book #spoilernotspoiler with one of JD Carr’s works – no need to look if you don’t want to know. (and it features in various other books of the era)

Another example of this – a number of people in the book have been in a blackmailer’s clutches. As it pans out, all are given assurances that the evidence has been destroyed, nothing more will happen. Except for a lower-class person, who apparently is not helpfully informed of this. I don’t know why I’m surprised.

There is a horrible anti-semitic slur in the book which could, and surely should, be easily removed.

But within those reservations, the book was good fun, with some very enjoyable moments, and an absolute case study in how the Golden Age mystery genre developed..

Kate over at Cross-Examining Crime has also reviewed this book

The Layton Court Mystery (1925) by Anthony Berkeley – crossexaminingcrime

Top photograph from the Clover Vintage Tumbler

Men and woman looking at blueprints - NYPL Digital Collections

Comments

  1. Susan D here
    Thanks for this, Moira. Another book I won’t have to read.

    Any time I see the name Roger Sheringham, I get him confused with J Sheringham Adair, another Golden Age fictional detective. Except he’s not, of course. He’s yet another in the long line of PGW’s imposters.

    A collection of Annoying Detectives? I’m sure joyful anticipation is even now shimmering across CIB Land.

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    1. That's very niche! Iwouldn't have known that name at all.
      I think this book is interesting for historical purposes, but you're probably safe giving it a miss

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  2. This sounds like the ur-Golden Age novel from which all others were descended, containing just about everything both good and bad. I will definitely be reading it at some point. Chrissie

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  3. It is interesting that JJ makes the claim this is the first country house weekend mystery novel. I was wondering if The Red House Mystery (1922) by A. A. Milne or The Mystery of the Skeleton Key (1919) by Bernard Capes might be considered earlier examples.

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    1. Oh and there's The Rasp by Philip Macdonald too.

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    2. I strongly suspected there would be argument on this!
      I wonder if I have quoted JJ exactly - maybe there was another defining phrase

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    3. The Red House Mystery is an odd one - all the house party guests exit the story as soon as the body is found! It certainly didn't feel like a "country house mystery" to me.

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    4. Very true - in particular his removing all the women! I will leave Kate and JJ to fight it out

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  4. I'm glad you reminded us, Moira, that the tropes in this book were not, well, tropes at the time it was written. Modern readers who are accustomed to crime fiction would spot them a mile away, but at the time, that wasn't so. You're right about the antisemitic slur; that bothered me a lot, and I wish it weren't in the novel. That said, though, the book does show how the classic 'impossible but not really' murder is set up, at least to me. Now, to start thinking about other annoying detectives...

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    1. Yes, it is very entertaining to see so MANY of the tropes safely there - I didn't even really mention the locked room above. And then there's footprints in the flowerbeds...
      Please do think up some annoying detectives

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    2. "Ah! ma'am, but there may be a difficulty. Pardon me, but you will be limited as to number..." (Thanks, as ever, to Jane Austen).

      So many..........to start with just one, Lady Lupin is unreadable for me. I'm assuming that many annoying detectives are intended to be charming, but there is a subcategory of detectives intended to be annoying, such as D.I. Price in Joanna Cannan's books. He is not as amusing as she thinks, in my opinion.
      Nerys

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    3. Even worse are those highly sophisticated ones like Philo Vance or the early Ellery Queen.
      A simple pain in the neck. Also I never found Ruth Rendell's Mike Burden particularly appealing. And last but not least Caroline Graham's Sergeant Troy (the one in the books). A most repellent character. The last two seem to be written to show off the lead character in an even better light.

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    4. Nerys: extremely apt quotation - as you say, we can always rely on Jane.
      And I had just added Lady Lupin to my own list before reading your comment.
      Jotell: Philo Vance annoyed me so much that I have read very little of him. I'm not sure - was he meant to be annoying?
      Definitely some matches with my list.

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  5. Honestly, when it comes to GA detectives, it might be easier to say which ones aren't annoying in some way. Chrissie

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    1. Good point. I've just been making my list, and you know when something just writes itself? I was never running out of material...

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  6. Re Philo Vance, I'm annoyed just by what I've heard about him, so have never read any of his exploits. I can just stand him when he's played by William Powell in a movie!

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    1. I could tell within a few pages of my first Philo book that I wasn't going to like him....

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  7. I read the Midsomer books after having seen them on TV, and was very surprised (and yes, repelled) by Troy. It was a good thing they changed him for TV, although the first episode had Barnaby being unnecessarily snarky to him. That's a good thought that he was written to make Barnaby look better!

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    1. Interesting detail on Midsummer, I don't have that level of knowledge, they just annoy me...

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  8. I've been surprised by how unlikeable I find various detectives in televsion adaptations (Dalgleish, Lynley) and I can't decide if I'm misled into liking someone whose point of view I'm taking while reading, if other people read characteristics and ways of speaking very differently from the way I do, or if this is an artifact of adapting to the screen, either deliberately or because of that loss of interiority.

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    1. A very interesting take on in Dame E. I don't know. And - how could I have forgotten Lynley, I must rush and add him to my list

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    2. Or the other way around. Many fans of the late John Thaw and his portrayal of Inspector Morse are in for a hugh surprise if they read the early Morse books from the 1970s.

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    3. Indeed, and Lewis also is very different

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    4. And there was Mrs Bradley--I didn't actually find Diana Rigg annoying, but wondered where they had found this character she was playing, who certainly wasn't the Mrs Bradley of the books. That DID annoy me. It reminded me of the Margaret Rutherford Miss Marple movies, I can imagine how many Christie fans reacted to them (and we know how Christie herself reacted).

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    5. I had the same reaction as you I think - I quite enjoyed them for what they were, while rejecting any connection with Mrs B. Apart from anything else - Diana Rigg had wonderful clothes - which obv I enjoyed - while Mrs B is famously badly-dressed

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  9. Sharon McCrumb's detective (more or less) Elizabeth MacPherson annoyed me quite a bit. McCrumb may have written her that way deliberately--she was wrong quite a lot, a bit like Roger Sheringham!

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    1. I haven't read those, but the Southern setting reminded me of Donna Andrews--her Meg Langslow annoys me considerably in that Meg was always complaining about her family but never tried moving away from them or just setting some boundaries. If you like your family and living in a small town, fine, enjoy! But don't complain so much. And if they make you feel like complaining all.the.time, then maybe you need to be Somewhere That Is Else. (Nothing to do with the detecting, which I don't remember with any clarity.)

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    2. Thank you all! At last I can admit that I find most detectives immensely irritating, they are rarely the most interesting characters in the book
      Albert Campion improved as he got older but Lord Peter Wimsey, ugh
      And as the nursery rhyme almost says: I do not love thee Gideon Fell...Jane Marple is OK, Inspector Cockerell does his best but Dalgliesh and all the 'interesting' ones who drink too much and don't have friends, so, so dull. I read the books despite them, not because of them.

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    3. A great collection of annoying detectives from you all... post comign soon

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  10. I wonder about that remark "mere prettiness always implies a certain insipidity"--what exactly is his definition of prettiness?

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    1. It sounds like a dashed-off phrase to me - 'need some description, what shall I say?'

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