If you ever run across this 1949 anthology in a used book store, snatch it up. It has a really good selection of Golden Age detective stories:
The Purloined Letter - Edgar Allan Poe
The Red-Headed League - Arthur Conan Doyle
The Problem of Cell 13 - Jacques Futrelle
The Case of Oscar Brodski - R. Austin Freeman
The Blue Cross - G. K. Chesterton
The Age of Miracles - Melville Davisson Post
The Little Mystery - E. C. Bentley
The Third-Floor Flat - Agatha Christie
The Yellow Slugs - H. C. Bailey
The Bone of Contention - Dorothy L. Sayers
The Adventure of the African Traveler - Ellery Queen
Instead of Evidence - Rex Stout
The House in Goblin Wood - Carter Dickson
The Dancing Detective - Cornell Woolrich
"The Case of Oscar Brodski," for example, shows us
forensic scientist John Thorndyke at his best. This story first appeared in the
December 1911 issue of McClure's Magazine.
Those of you who make a point of reading a blog like this
might very well know about Thorndyke. He is, in fact, one of the Great
Detectives of the Golden Age. Created by R. Austin Freeman, Thorndyke headlined
22 novels and 40 short stories between 1907 and 1942. The structure of these
mysteries is interesting, using a method that would most famously be used by
Lt. Columbo in the made-for-TV movies starring Peter Falk. Thorndyke and
Columbo aren't alike at all in terms of personality and investigative
methodology, but their stories are similar in that we (the readers) always know
who the killer is. We follow along with the criminal while the crime is being
committed, usually in some clever way that leaves him justifibly convinced
he'll get away with it. Then we have fun watching Thorndyke gather evidence to
prove the killer guilty.
In "The Case of Oscar Brodksi," the killer is
jewel thief Silas Hickler, who does not normally employ violence when plying
his trade. But when he has a chance to lure diamond merchant Oscar Brodski into
his home, the temptation to kill the man to get the diamonds Brodski is
carrying quickly becomes irresistable.
The murder is a little messier than Hickler intended, but he
eventually manages to smother Brodski to death, then dump the body on a
railroad track several hundred yards from his home. A train comes by soon after
and Brodski's body is beheaded by the impact. Hickler now has reason to
believe the death will be considered an accident or suicide.
And he might have gotten away with it, too, if it weren't
for that meddling forensic scientist. Dr. Thorndyke is in the area and looks
into the case. What follows is a step-by-step and very detailed inspection of
the forensic evidence, covering everthing from the materials stuck to the
bottom of Brodski's shoes to the the amount of broken glass found near the dead
man's eyeglasses. Soon, the evidence and his logical interpretations of that
evidence leads him to the home in which the murder occured and the identity of
the killer.
It's a wonderfully constructed short story that often seems to be ahead of its time, prefacing the heavy use of forensic evidence that pops up in modern TV crime shows. The Thorndyke stories all build an enormous amount of suspense, despite our knowing who the killer is. Thorndyke's cleverness and use of then-modern forensics keep us fascinated in the process of bringing a murderer to justice.
So pick up that anthology if you ever find it, but make a special point of finding R. Austin Freeman's Dr. Thorndyke tales to treat yourself to the delight of reading them.
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