Patrick Quentin: 2 x Puzzles and a Stage Door

Puzzle for Players by Patrick Quentin

published 1938


Puzzle for Fools  by Patrick Quentin

published 1936

 



I’ve read a few books by this author, but never really kept track of reading in order or working out the story of the writers hidden behind the pen-name, which eg might change to Q Patrick.

Luckily for all of us, crime fiction expert (and friend) Curtis Evans does keep track of everything, and helpfully has a recent post on this author, full of information and links:

The Passing Tramp: 5 million views and the Hugh Wheeler/Richard Webb (Patrick Quentin) Critical Biography


In a recent discussion of theatrical mysteries, Puzzle for Players was mentioned, so here we go. A chance to use my new special logo for one of my favourite genres:


 


It has some of the best elements – a Broadway theatre, a play in rehearsal, the demanding older actress with a young man fluttering round her, weird guys at the stage door, a sinister ex-husband hanging round.

And all kinds of things are going wrong: a possible ghost, a broken mirror, a creepy cat -  just your usual everyday items. It is a very complex plot, with some separate strands working together, and everyone being open about their loves and problems and secrets, which prevents a lot of time-wasting. There is a coffin on stage, so we kind of know where that’s going: the question being, who is going to be in it?

Two distinguished European gents meet up with each other;

Wesler gripped Dr Lenz’ hand. I shall never forget that titanic moment when beard met beard. It was like Jupiter and Wotan getting together at some celestial convention.

There is also a charming British character actress, Theo, who wears tweeds and falls in love all too easily.


women of the theatre company

Peter, our hero and sleuth and director of the play, has to visit her in the early hours of the morning:

She was sitting up in bed, wearing very severe white pajamas. She looked rather wonderful, like Lady Gwendolne Marchbanks, the haughty British heroine of a pre-war romance.

[Editorial note: where was her bedjacket?]

She was earlier able to understand an overheard conversation because luckily

‘I picked up some German when I played Shaw in Vienna.’

I was particularly reminded me of Helen McCloy’s

Cue for Murder by Helen McCloy

 &  Trial in Three Acts by Guy Morpuss

And also a great favourite story, and a treasured entry from the past:

Eurovision, Saki, and the Big Borzoi: 'everyone singing like mad'

Mirabelle Rue, the grand dame actress, is very like Cousin Teresa, and has a big borzoi. (that sounds like a risque euphemism, but isn’t)

Everyone seems to be either blackmailing, being blackmailed, or having pressure put on them. There are some good secrets to be revealed. The play they are rehearsing sounds entertainingly fabulously dreadful, and also has some echoes of the offstage plot.

What more could you want from a theatrical mystery?

John Norris has done an excellent review of this book here

Pretty Sinister Books: Puzzle for Players - Patrick Quentin



all-purpose pajama picture

 

The narrator, Peter Duluth, a Quentin regular, keeps mentioning that his wife burned to death in a theatre while playing Juliet, so I assumed that the previous book

Puzzle for Fools

would be the story of that death, crime etc, and thus another theatrical mystery, so I read that one next.

But not at all – as far as I know, the Juliet incident is never explained. In fact Peter has fallen into alcoholic despair about the death, and is in a sanitarium recovering.

And before we know where we are, there are a huge range of staff and patients all being threatened, hearing voices, and suffering massive meltdowns in the middle of the night. Peter most certainly not excluded.

There is an intrinsic creepiness in the setting, or as Peter puts it, ‘there is something about an empty passage in a sanitarium – something bleak and forbidding.’

There are a lot of incidents, a lot going on, and there is also a young woman whom Peter is very interested in. I don’t think it is a #spoiler to say she is not going to be culprit or victim because she appears in Puzzle for Players.

Peter will get her a part in the play. He can tell she will be a swell actress by the way she mops the floor. We, the readers, just have to take it on trust.

Peter has some good lines: ‘Apparently there’s no-one who inspires more gratuitous confidences than an alcoholic in a  mental home.’

When someone is found dead:

“Do you think it’s murder?”

“My stage training has taught me that people who are found trussed up in grotesque positions are always the victims of some dastardly crime.”

He also acts like a complete idiot in trying to try out  a word association trick on suspects. This is something Clothes in Books wholly disapproves of, as explained, with examples, in this post

The Man in the Moonlight by Helen McCloy

 

The whole thing was like a less terrifying version of Dennis Lehane’s fabulous Shutter Island (book and film): Quentin made excellent use of the atmosphere and there was nifty/nasty use of straitjackets.

Iris tips up in a purple evening dress at the sanitarium party: that’s not a common colour to find, and I had just used one up in this post, where the point was its revealing cut, so have nicked it from there

Undertakers from London to Broadway




She also gets a go at white silk pajamas, in which ‘ she looked like a particularly healthy angel, a sort of celestial hockey captain’.

I enjoyed the books, and will eventually move on to the later Puzzle books.

Picture of a 1930s NY rehearsal

Script reading at rehearsal of Elizabeth the Queen. Philip Moeller (director, seated), Lynn Fontanne & Alfred Lunt. - NYPL Digital Collections

Three women in daywear

Daywear and sportswear ensembles - NYPL Digital Collections

All purpose pajama picture – actually Ginger Rogers.

Other Quentin books on the blog:

The Wife of Ronald Sheldon by Patrick Quentin

Murder at Cambridge by Q Patrick

Comments

  1. Sergio (Tipping My Fedora)8 June 2026 at 09:59

    Really enjoyed this point, Moira. Took me right back to my teenage years reading the Quentin / Jonathan Stagge / Q Patrick books. Once Wheeler joined Webb in 1936 with the first Duluth book, I was won over by the down-to-earth characterisation and emphasis on realism (in the psychology of the characters at least) that seemed really refreshing. The development of the relationship between Peter and Iris is surprisingly realistic given the era.

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    1. I'm sure you understand all the name versions Sergio! I read some of them a good long time ago, and am now catching up - a lot easier to track them down these days (and to find great explanatory info online)
      Yes they create good, real characters

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  2. Sergio (Tipping My Fedora)8 June 2026 at 10:00

    OK, that was "post" not 'point' - darn autocorrect

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    1. I've read and enjoyed Puzzle for Fools, but not Puzzle for Players. It sounds right up my street. Love the bits you quoted! Chrissie

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    2. Oh I do think you will like Puzzle for Players Chrissie - as I say above it put me in mind of Helen McCloy, whom I know you like

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  3. You had me at theatrical mystery, Moira. As you know, I do like that sort of story, and both of these sound like solid stories with some great characters. And that broken mirror (don't know why that stays with me, but it does). I have to admit, I don't know Quentin's work, so it's good that you and Curtis have me thinking about it....

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    1. We are twin souls on the theatrical mysteries Margot, and he(they) often feature that background, even when not as overt as Puzzle for Players - I think you would enjoy

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  4. I know I've read something by Patrick Quentin (can't recall what) and quite enjoyed it without feeling any particular urge to seek out more, but Puzzle for Players sounds like fun.

    Are bedjackets worn with pyjamas? Bedjacket illustrations always seem to show a dainty nightie underneath. Quite apart from anything else, one could find oneself with an awkward disparity between the length of the bedjacket and the length of the pyjama jacket..

    Sovay

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    1. It is an interesting read - like you, I haven't been rushing to read him (them) but when I do I enjoy.

      I can't believe you are trying to destory my viral bedjacket business (I'll get round to it one day and it will make my fortune) by imposing rules! Of course you can have a bedjacket with pyjamas, and the length variation will look Stylish 😉😉😉

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    2. I'm pretty sure Clothes in Books readers/customers will take their own line and not be bound by rules! I've already decided that once your range becomes available I'll need to clear the top drawer of my bedside table and devote it to bedjackets - ideally they'd hang in the wardrobe on hangers padded with pastel satin, but this presupposes a maid to ferry them to and from the bedside without one having to get up ...

      Sovay

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    3. Perhaps we need a small low hanging cupboard to put next to the bed for easy reach. These could be sidelines to the business, along with the hangers - lace-trimmed?

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    4. I think elegant wardrobe accessories are definitely a sideline worth considering, once the core collection of bedjackets and bridge coats is established. And if the cupboards do well you could branch out into chiffarobes, credenzas, chesterfields ...

      Just looking again at the purple evening gown - I don't think it IS that revealing. The crossover straps give it that look, but the gold bandeau underneath gives pretty good coverage.

      Sovay

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    5. Yes I think you make good furniture points....
      the undergarment to the purple dress I thought was rather strange

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  5. I've just read and enjoyed Puzzle for Fools, and am starting on Puzzle for Players. Duluth seems very likable so far, brave but not super-heroic, and smart but no super-sleuth. I was amused to see one of the above-mentioned beards described as "arrogant"!

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    1. Glad you are enjoying, I'm sure you will spot new aspects that I didnt notice

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  6. ‘ she looked like a particularly health angel, a sort of celestial hockey captain’ (should this be "a healthy angel"?) - sounds like Gladys's Mitchell's Laura has escaped into another book.

    -Roger

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    1. Yes, typo by me, I will correct. Excellent connection - it would be an even better description of Laura than of the woman in this book....

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  7. I will be buying shares in the bedjacket business as and when....

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  8. I’m belatedly reminded by the fate of Peter Duluth’s wife that I once saw Othello set himself on fire during a performance at the Victoria Theatre, Stoke-on-Trent. There was a real candle on a table, and he was sitting on a bench beside it, leaning back wearily whilst soliloquising, when his hair began to smoulder. Fortunately it was in the round so the audience was collectively able to alert him before actual flames appeared.

    Sovay

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    1. What a splendid moment! Did it put him off his stride?

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    2. There was a brief moment of frantic scrabbling at the back of his head - then he soliloquised on - it was quite impressive!

      Sovay

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