Barbara Baron, a student in fashion design at the International School of Design, is found in Shinbone Alley a forgotten byway in lower Manhattan. She plummeted to her death from the rooftop smoking terrace after modeling her winning design in the school's annual competitive fashion show. The sight of her body clad in her handmade bridal gown provides an ironic comment on her planned marriage to the school's president Jorden Fairchild. Suicide and accident are soon ruled out when McKee discovers evidence on the smoking terrace that Barbara had a visitor who gave her a fatal shove. And it turns out that lots of people might have wanted to send her flying as Babs was a supercilious and loathesome woman.
For the first few chapters this is a fairly routine detective novel that I expected to have more insight into 1940s era police work. But truly it's more of a traditional fair play detective novel than it is police procedural. I was worried when the first few clues turn out to be tired cliches of the genre (a initialed handkerchief, used match sticks, for example) that it would continue down the pathway of the hackneyed. Then the theft of an Indian dagger used by one of the life models is stolen. McKee fears that the dagger will be used on one of the suspects who he is sure saw something on the terrace, but is unwilling to reveal his secret to the police. At this point the story picks up in pace and interest and all my fears of a lackluster story filled with familiar elements were assuaged.
The art school and the various characters who make up the teaching and business staff make for an atypical background and liven the proceedings. Suspicion falls on Nairn English, one of the students, and Philip Mountain, an art instructor. McKeee knows that each is withholding information and in the manner of Trent's Last Case seem to be protecting each other thinking the other is the killer. When the mentally challenged errand boy of the school, Willie Cleet, is found stabbed and Philip is seen fleeing the crime scene and climbing a wall with bloody hands McKee focuses his investigation on finding the art teacher and has his men follow Nairn hoping she will lead him to their suspect.
Highlights of the book include the scenes devoted to the minor police characters' contributions to the murder investigation. Todhunter, a mousey nearly invisible cop, has an uncanny ability to transform himself into other personae. He does a mean drunk impersonation and uses that skill to gain access to Nairn English and gets her to confide in him without letting on he is actually a policeman. Another officer, Captain Pierson, has a great scene where her pursues Nairn though the cemetery at Barbara Baron's funeral. He falls in a shallow grave muddying himself, loses his subject, picks up her trail again and finally tails her to Mountain's hiding place. It was one of the most cinematic set pieces in the book reminding me of a similar graveyard chase on foot in Hitchcock's Family Plot.
Helen Reilly was a pioneer in the police procedural novel. She was one of the first women writers tackling this subgenre as early as the late 1920s. Howard Haycraft said in Murder for Pleasure (1941) that her novels about McKee "are among the most convincing that have been composed on the premise of actual police procedure." Perhaps her other books show off her knowledge to better effect. Surprisingly, the books ends with one of those "gather the suspects in one room" scenes and McKee's seems like something out of an old Agatha Christie novel than the kind of book contemporary police procedurals are these days. Still, Murder in Shinbone Alley (1940) is an enjoyable detective novel with a truly surprising least likely person revealed as the murderer.
AVAILABILITY: Luckily, this is a book that was reprinted in paperback edition by Macfadden and it went into two printings. Multiple copies of one or the other are available online ranging from $2 to $15. Not bad when I usually recommend books that 1. you can't find or 2. will cost you the equivalent of a winter month's heating bill.
This marks seventh book in the first part of my three part 2012 Vintage Mystery Reading Challenge sponsored by Bev at My Reader's Block. Links to the previously reviewed books are listed below.
Part I. Perilous Policemen
The Case of the Beautiful Body - Jonathan Craig
Murder by the Clock - Rufus King
The Death of Laurence Vining - Alan Thomas
The Moon Murders - Nigel Morland
Killer's Wedge - Ed McBain
Exit Charlie - Alex Atkinson
Oh, John. A Helen Reilly book with an academic twist...Looks like I'll be adding to my TBR stack.
ReplyDeleteI know that Reilly is known for her police procedurals but she does have a bit of an Agatha Christie feel to a few of her mysteries.
You really do have a broad definition of academic mystery, don't you? ;^)
ReplyDeleteI was genuinely surprised how this turned around after the first quarter into a very enjoyable mystery. And she fooled me! Can't ask for more. I have more of her books than I thought once I went through all my paperbacks. I'll be reading more of Reilly.
Thanks for this review of one of Helen Reilly's early mysteries, one that I haven't read. In fact I haven't read very many of the early ones, mostly ones from the late 40s into the 50s, when her books became even less police procedural and more traditional "fair play."
ReplyDeleteThere were a lot of different aspects to Helen Reilly's mysteries over the years, even in this one single book, as you've pointed out.
It's also quite possible that SHINBONE ALLEY was a transition point for her overall career, but you'd have to read more of her books than I have to say so for sure.
Well, well, you really did review a book that does not require plucking the moon from a star-strewn sky in order to get our greedy hands on it. I think we're making progress here! ;)
ReplyDeleteAnyway, Helen Reilly is one of those mystery writers who has, for the most part, passed me by and the two McKee novels I have read were polar opposites of each other in terms of writing and plotting (liked Mourned on Sunday a lot more than her locked room mystery Dead Man Control).
But I guess I should move her up on my wish list as well. This book does sound like the kind of mystery I would enjoy.
Mystery fans have lives filled with tough choices, obstacles and other hardships. *sigh*
This is so unfair of you, John. You have access to all these wonderful vintage mysteries I can only dream about...!
ReplyDeleteThough this one sounds fairly easily sought out for a few dollars. I'm adding it to my list, as usual. And when I have he dough, I'll look around for it.
Thanks for another great review. Damn your hide.
Ha!