More Work for Undertakers and Fortune Tellers

More Work for the Undertaker by Margery Allingham

 published 1949



When I did my post on fortune-telling

Can you Predict which Books I will Feature? - Fortune Tellers

 - blogfriend Lucy had suggestions, including Margery Allingham’s More Work for the Undertaker. It’s a while since I’d last read it, but I had no memory of fortune-telling featuring. When I re-read, I found that it is most certainly there, and plays an important role in the plot, but it is very late on in the book – I was almost giving up. But there it is:

‘That’s the gal all right. Call’s herself Pharaoh’s Daughter. She gives readings for a tanner a time and we never bothered her under the Act because she seemed so harmless.’

She is also referred to as Psychic Phoeb.

And so – oh joy – I can use a great favourite picture: The Pythoness, who is actually the Pharaoh’s Daughter from the story of Joseph in the Bible.

Pauline Frederick - Potiphar's wife (LOC) | Bain News Servic… | Flickr


However - I didn’t enjoy this book nearly as much as I was expecting, or perhaps as much as it deserved. It had so many features that I normally love, such as poison pen letters. There are the Palinodes, a weird family: see recent posts such as this one

Falling in Love with the Whole Family

 – the usual thing that I found them appalling and psychopathic, not charming and eccentric. ‘Campion was aware that she realized that she was being very naughty…’  is the kind of off-putting remark I object to. I am not charmed by entitled privileged people who don’t do a hand’s turn, waste their money, and are rude and unpleasant to others.They have their own language: ‘Im doing a Cawnthorpe’. How hilarious.

There is the  ex-showgirl Renee, who also featured in

Dancers in Mourning by Margery Allingham

a book that I recently enjoyed hugely, moving it up the list. She ran a theatrical boarding-house in that book, and has  changed into a different kind of landlady, in a way that is glancingly explained early on, a bit more detail later, but none of it really convincing.

The events take place around Apron St, one of those corners of London that Allingham describes so beautifully, making them real. Here the small shops are trying to recover after the War, and the poshos’ house faces the titular undertakers. There is a theatre in Apron St, but disappointingly little is made of it.

All this worked so well in another book more than 10 years later – many of the same tropes but much more readable

The China Governess by Margery Allingham

I got lost in the middle of this one with all the tradesmen and the lodgers and the hideous Palinodes. Lugg was – as always – a treat whenever he appeared.

Then it picked up towards the end. There is a small party, like a literary salon, late on, and it’s a pity there wasn’t more of that. Here’s Lugg with the canapes: ‘the old girl persuaded me to ‘and around. She see at once that I could do it.’

The very creepy idea of ‘Going up Apron St’ and why people were scared about it, was hardly surprising in its explanation, but gave us a frisson. The long-drawn-out section chasing the coffin-brake (horse-drawn hearse) through the streets of London late at  night, followed by an equally-extended delay while we wait for the coffin to be opened, was terrific. Allingham was in her element with this.

There was a young woman who wore very old-fashioned clothes at home while having a taste for other styles:




She was in all her glory. A skin-tight bodice revealed the charm of her young bosom. Amightly skirt spread out in exaggerated folds. A spotted scarf made her look like a dressed-up kitten, and a modern boater sat squarely and fashionably on her newly-dressed hair.

Charlie Luke surveyed her.

‘I tell you what,’ he said at last. ‘Take off the scarf and I’ll take you to the pictures Sunday.’

Will anything come of it?  Ah well…. We know.

And the book ends excellently – with a telling letter from the otherwise absent Amanda.


I couldn't find all the features of the young woman's outfit in one photo, so I combined them.

The Vintage

The Ladies' home journal : Wyeth, N. C. (Newell Convers), 1882-1945 : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

 Bonwit Teller store window (New York, N.Y.) featuring Oklahoma! - NYPL Digital Collections

Comments

  1. I am with you, Moira, there are enough 'entitled privileged people in real life without being expected to be amused by them between the pages of a book. However I do seem to remember enjoying this more than you did. Such a great title and she is so good at the sinister and macabre. Chrissie

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    1. Yes, she is so good at that: perhaps it just caught me on a bad day. I looked up the last time I read it, and my notes say I very much enjoyed it, and found it funny. Which was not true this time....

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  2. Is the depiction of the Palinodes supposed to be satirical? Possible sending up Bloomsbury remnants ? I'm not sure. When I was once in the doldrums a friend lent me More work for the undertaker and I was hooked on Allingham. This is isn't her best book and I couldn't choose which one is because her range and the way her writing changes over the years but it is gripping and the sense of menace masquerading as the everyday is chilling. Plus, Magersfontein Lugg of course.

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    1. Lugg was a sparkling joy! When I first read Allingham as a teenager I didn't quite get the point of him, but in my advanced years, he is the highlight of the books, I always want more of him.
      Maybe I was having a off day when I did this reread!

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  3. I found this rather fun - I liked the variation on the usual disclaimer, which says that every character is "A careful portrait of a living person, who has expressed himself delighted not only with the accuracy but with the clarity of the delineation. Any resemblance to any unconsulted person is therefore accidental."
    I also found Jas Bowels an appropriate brother-in-law for Lugg, and the explanation for the young woman's eccentric outfit also amused me.
    It is strongly hinted that there was another murder, which no one had any great desire to prove was not an accident. Perhaps an example of looser morality after the war, which made Kind Hearts and Coronets a comedy rather than a crime film and allowed an ambiguous ending (at least in the UK).
    On eccentric families, I found the Palinodes less annoying than the Lampreys (not a high bar). That's even allowing for the fact that, when I last read Surfeit of Lampreys, I half-convinced myself that we weren't meant to like 80% of the family, and that Roberta saw them more clearly than when she first met them in New Zealand.

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    1. Your line on eccentric families sums it up perfectly!
      Interesting idea that black comedy became more accpetable after the war.
      I think I have to put this book away for now, and pick it up again in a couple of years and see if it works better for me.

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