A review by fictionfan
Resorting to Murder: Holiday Mysteries by Martin Edwards

4.0

Trains and boats and planes... 3½ stars

Another in the British Library Crime Classics series, this works well as a companion piece to Martin Edward's other recent anthology, Capital Crimes: London Mysteries. As the title suggests, Resorting to Murder is a collection of classic crime stories set in holiday destinations. While a lot of them are set in and around Britain, several others take us abroad, mainly to Europe with the Swiss mountains featuring more than once (well, a good place to make a murder look like an accident, eh?). In his introduction, Edwards suggests that holiday settings were popular with authors since the novelty of the location allowed them to concentrate a bit less on creating strong plots. The stories are in rough chronological order, as in Capital Crimes, again allowing us to see the progression of the mystery story.

There are a few well known names in here – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The Adventure of the Devil's Foot is the first story and GK Chesterton appears with a non-Father Brown story. But there also many whom I didn't recognise at all or only knew because they had also appeared in Capital Crimes.

Here are a few of the stories that stood out for me...

The Finger of Stone by GK Chesterton – I admit that the Father Brown stories have never appealed much to me, so it was refreshing to read something different from Chesterton. This one centres on the creation versus evolution debate when a scientist who has 'proved' that the Biblical timetable can't be correct disappears. It's a bit silly, especially the twist ending, but fun and well written.

Holiday Task by Leo Bruce – this is a great example of a howdunit. A newly appointed prison governor is killed when he apparently drives his car off a cliff. But was it murder? And if it was, how was it done? The solution is clever and I kicked myself for not being able to work it out. As Holmes often remarked, it's all so easy once you know how...

The Hazel Ice by HC Bailey – I enjoyed Bailey's contribution in Classic Crimes and liked this one just as much. Reggie Fisher is again the amateur detective, this time in a story involving a man who is missing after an accident in the mountains. Edwards puts Bailey's decline from the public eye down to his quirky writing style, but I find it entertaining. It's terribly upper-class 1920/30s style – Fisher doesn't wear a monocle but one feels he should. A cross between Lord Peter Wimsey and PG Wodehouse, though admittedly not quite as well written as either. But fun.

A Posteriori by Helen Simpson – A short and strictly humorous story centring on the dangers of ladies travelling alone and being forced to make use of... ahem... public conveniences. Made me chuckle.

The House of Screams by Gerald Findler – a great little horror/crime story about a man renting a haunted house. Are the screams that he hears in the middle of the night the ghost of a previous tenant? I'd have loved to read more of Findler's work, but Edwards tells us that he only published one other story.

In truth, I thought this collection was quite a bit weaker than the London stories. Perhaps it's the locations – London has always been such a great setting for crime fiction – or perhaps Edwards' point about plotting is at the root of it, but on the whole I found many of these stories pretty obvious and not overly original or atmospheric, and often without much sense of place despite the interesting locations. There is some crossover of authors between the two collections, but there are also several in this who don't appear in the other volume, and I felt one or two had been included for their curiosity value more than for the intrinsic quality of the stories. As usual in any collection, though, the quality is variable and there are enough good stories to outweigh the weaker ones overall, meaning this is still an enjoyable read. 3½ stars for me, so rounded up.

NB This book was provided for review by the publisher, Poisoned Pen Press, who publish the Kindle version. The paper version is part of the British Library’s Crime Classics series.

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