I read this book for the Mount TBR Reading Challenge hosted over
at My
Reader’s Block from January 1 – December 31, 2017. The challenge is to read
books that you already own.
Silence Observed
– Michael Innes
In this 1961 mystery, Appleby says he is 53, which means
he was born in 1907 or 1908. Yard detective John Appleby first appeared in 1936
in Seven Suspects, an academic
murder mystery set in an Oxford-type institution. He retired from the Yard
after WWII and went to work in the upper reaches of the Metropolitan Police. He
was active post-retirement in 1986 when Appleby and the Ospreys appeared. I know of no other
author who kept a character going for 33 novels and numerous short stories for
50 years.
I suppose some critics argue that the Appleby novels of
the 1970s and 1980s lack the literary touches that characterize Hamlet, Revenge! (1937) and Lament for a Maker (1938). Silence Observed is mainly for
entertainment, with few literary flourishes and only a little suspense. I think
it’s worth reading for the creative use of learned language and examination of
the acquisitive mentality of collectors and misers. Appleby observes, “Those
whom the gods wish to destroy, they first make mad. Just a little mad, for a
start. Inclined, say, to unreasonable jokes in the course of business. But
later – well, very mad indeed.”
Just by chance, Appleby’s attention is arrested by two
instances of forgeries in the art world. One collector has acquired a forgery
of a notorious forger; another has been offered, of all things, a lost
Rembrandt. An unlucky young man has been discovered with both bodies in highly
suspicious circumstances. Appleby feels something is amiss and gets him off the
hook, since in whodunit land, as we hardcore mystery readers know, it is never
the obvious suspect.
The pool of suspects is small enough to make the reveal
fairly predictable. But the familiar characters, the erudite vocabulary, and
London setting – though there is another remote insane manse as in Lament for a Maker and Hare Sitting Up, among others – make
this an agreeable, soothing read.
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