I read this book for the Mount TBR Reading Challenge hosted over
at My
Reader’s Block from January 1 – December 31, 2016. The challenge is to read
books that you already own.
The Allingham Case
Book – Margery Allingham
Readers and critics place this mystery writer among the
best old time cozy writers such as Sayers, Christie, and Tey. Allingham’s
series hero was mildly eccentric Albert Campion and his police buddy Charlie
Luke. She was a professional writer down to her toes, able to construct solid
plots peopled with peculiar characters in the Dickensy tradition.
This is a collection of 18 short stories that were
collected in 1969 after her early passing in 1966. Some of the stories feature
Campion though mainly as a listener to crime stories told by Luke. In a
collection this large, there will be stories any reader likes a lot better than
the others. But overall, the stories are charming, ingenious, and readable.
Some do not turn on a murder, but a con game or clever theft. Her spirit of fun
appeals to me.
The edition I read was the 1972 Macfadden-Bartell one. It has a good introduction written by her widower. But, as is usual with cheapskate publishers, it gives no indication when the stories were written or what magazines they were published in. Some of them feel pre-WWII, but some are oddly timeless. I know that most readers don’t care, but I like to know what year or era a story is taking place.
The edition I read was the 1972 Macfadden-Bartell one. It has a good introduction written by her widower. But, as is usual with cheapskate publishers, it gives no indication when the stories were written or what magazines they were published in. Some of them feel pre-WWII, but some are oddly timeless. I know that most readers don’t care, but I like to know what year or era a story is taking place.
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