An English Murder
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Author | Cyril Hare |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Crime mystery |
An English Murder is a crime novel novel by Cyril Hare.[1] Published in 1951, it combines traits of classical Golden Age murder mystery – a group of guests in a snowed in country house – with the realities of post-war Britain.
The book was republished in 2017, with both Mark Lawson in The Guardian and Marcel Berlins in The Sunday Times listing it as one of the best crime novels of the year.[2][3]
List of characters
- Old Lord Warbeck, a peer.
- Robert Warbeck, the only son of Lord Warbeck.
- Sir Julius Warbeck, first cousin of Lord Warbeck, M.P., Chancellor of the Exchequer.
- Lady Camilla Prendergast.
- Mrs. Carstairs, a wife of Alan Carstairs, colleague of Sir Julius and his likely successor at the position of the Chancellor of the Exchequer.
- James Arthur Rogers, sergeant in the Metropolitan Police, assigned as a personal guard to Sir Julius.
- Briggs, a butler in Warbeck Hall.
- Susan, Briggs's daughter.
- Wenceslaus Bottwink, Professor of History. Born in Hungary, having Jewish and Russian blood in his make-up, he was a citizen of Austria, then Czechoslovakia, then Germany as the Second World War progressed. Fortunate to escape a Nazi concentration camp, he found himself on the shores of Great Britain.
Plot
During dinner, Robert Warbeck, the only son and heir of the old Lord, dies in front of the other guests. Because of heavy snowfall Warbeck Hall is cut off the outer world, and the phone line is broken. Detective Rogers takes upon himself the task of investigating the murder. Soon after, the old Lord Warbeck himself, who already was on his last legs, dies. A silent panic strikes the guests, who try to keep together. Still, another guest dies, this time it is Mrs. Carstairs. Both Robert Warbeck and Mrs. Carstairs seem to have been poisoned. Doctor Bottwink, who was originally invited to study centuries-old documents in the family library, becomes a witness to the dreadful events. Trying to make sense of the deaths, he finds the murderer.
Political and social context
The novel was published in 1951, six years after the end of the Second World War, in which Great Britain was one of the victors. Nevertheless, its position as a superpower became increasingly shaky while it was losing colonies and influence in world politics. In 1945 general election the Labour Party secured an unexpected landslide victory, which was cemented in 1950 general election. The left-leaning government enacted much of the post-war consensus policies, especially the welfare state and nationalisation of some industries; it was marked by post-war austerity measures, in giving independence to India, in splitting Palestine and forming Israel, and engagement in the Cold War against Soviet Union.
An underlying theme in the novel is one of social change. The ailings and death of old Lord Warbeck are a symbol of old order and traditions disappearing and new more liberal system taking in. He is sorry for his son, Robert, who "have had the misfortune to be born into the first generation of the dispossessed". In opposition to the Labour government, which "has gone about to destroy tradition—to destroy us—to destroy our country", Robert Warbeck has organized a fascist League of Liberty and Justice, an antisemitic and anti-socialist organization. Talking with Lady Camilla, Robert bursts: "Has your new Jew friend asked you to go back to Palestine with him yet?"
Sir Julius, despite being a first cousin of Lord Warbeck, identifies himself as socialist and occupies the position of "Chancellor of the Exchequer in the most advanced socialist government of Western Europe". He considers post-war Great Britain a world where "the owners of historic mansions are pitiable anachronisms, helplessly awaiting the hour when the advancing tread of social justice would force them from the privileged positions they had too long usurped". When Sir Julius thinks back about the murders that occurred in Warbeck Hall, he comes to a conclusion that it was him who was targeted, and only by chance he was spared. "Who are the real enemies of communism today? Why, we are—the democratic socialists of Western Europe!" shouts Sir Julius, blaming Doctor Bottwink in the murders.
Doctor Bottwink, a well-educated Jew from Eastern Europe, who managed to escape Nazi concentration camp, is sympathetic to Communist ideas but despises Soviet Stalinism. Sergeant Rogers asks Doctor Bottwink whether he was in Vienna during Dolfuss régime, and Doctor Bottwink clarifies that he was anti-Dolfuss, anti-clerical, and anti-Fascist.
As an example of British foreign endeavors, Sir Julius and Mrs. Carstairs clash over a Chinese gong, used by Briggs to signal for meal. "I remember my father telling me it came from the loot of the Winter Palace at Pekin. Great days! Great days!" observes Sir Julius. "Surely, Sir Julius, you don't suggest that the sack of the Winter Palace was a creditable episode in our history?" breaks in Mrs. Carstairs, and the acrid discussion proceeds on the events surrounding the Boxer revolt of 1900.
The events of the novel are backed by social stratification, political affiliations, national identities, and by convoluted combination of democratic and royal laws and customs of Great Britain. Reissued at the time when Brexit became a reality and Labour Party led by Jeremy Corbyn achieved the biggest percentage-point increase in its vote share since 1945[4], the novel re-gaines its relevance amidst the contentions of 21st century politics.[5]
References
- ^ Norfolk, Pam (15 November 2017). "Book review: An English Murder by Cyril Hare". Lancashire Evening Post.
- ^ Lawson, Mark (30 November 2017). "The best crime books and thrillers of 2017". The Guardian.
- ^ Berlins, Marcel (25 November 2017). "The best crime fiction of 2017". The Sunday Times.
- ^ Griffin, Andrew (9 June 2017). "Corbyn gives Labour biggest vote share increase since 1945". The London Economic. Retrieved 10 June 2017.
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(help) - ^ Rafferty, Philip (13 January 2018). "An English Murder". Crime Fiction Lover.
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