CHARACTERS: There are enough research chemists in Death, My Darling Daughters (1945) to give any policeman a headache. Hilton heads up a research team and is one of those arrogant scientists who wants all the credit for himself making for an acrimonious working relationship with his colleague Dr. Richard Kenton-Oake and especially Dr. Victor Roberts, the hothead hunk (“The young doctor was the best looking man I had ever seen”). Victor is yet another Stagge Adonis whose initial description goes on for an entire paragraph detailing his “too beautiful” looks, impressive physique and “animal virility”. But he’s an embittered beauty. He’s not only angry about having his name left off publications for developing the synthetic rubber esters he made himself, but is ticked off that Hilton disapproves of his womanizing. Victor can’t help himself, of course, setting hearts aflutter of every young woman in the Hilton household including Hilton’s giddy much younger wife Janie. He’s sex on a stick 1945 style, passionate in temperament in more ways than one.
French paperback using a close translation of the British alternate title (see below) |
The Hilton daughters who all sport the names of Shakespearean characters – Perdita, Rosalind and Helena – are not at all like their namesakes. Webb and Wheeler like their characters to be ironically named. Helena is brash and brazen, Rosalind is petulant and ridiculing, Perdita is distant and unloving to her father. All of them are talentless musicians no matter how hard their mother attempts to cultivate them into a classical trio. But they have other hidden talents – like vocal impressions. Rosalind is particularly talented in her various impressions of the men and women in the Hilton household. She imitates her mother and sister to perfection. Is that a clue to events to come? Maybe. Maybe just a clever red herring.
Their imperious controlling mother does her best to maintain her façade of social politeness but is a dragon of the worst sort. There is a scene between Mrs. Lanchester (she is George’s sister) and Dr. Kenton-Oake’s wife that could have been lifted from Clare Booth Luce’s witty play The Women. A verbal cat fight that allows each woman to reveal her true self. It’s a trenchant theatrical touch with bitchy and cruelly witty dialogue that foreshadows Hugh Wheeler’s future career as a playwright.
UK 1st edition (Michael Joseph, 1946) |
THINGS I LEARNED: Back in the day (and maybe still true today) silver polish contained enough quantities of potassium cyanide to cause toxicity if not handled properly. Dr. Stahl quotes from contemporary toxicology textbooks specific cases of fatal poisonings resulting from the accidental ingestion of residual silver polish not properly removed from silverware, pots and platters.
Arrowroot, often used in cooking as a starch substitute, can also have toxic properties in mass quantities. Ironically, the name itself originally came about because the plant was useful in drawing out poison from envenomed arrows.
German edition. Title translates as: Mrs Hilton's Pretty Daughters (Gift is the German word for "poison") |
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This is my second contribution to Rich Westwood's "Crimes of the Century" meme. This month we read books published in the year 1945. The first book I read and reviewed was This Is The House by Shelley Smith. A list of all the 1945 book posts and contributor's blogs can be found on this page at Rich's blog Past Offenses.
Another lovely-sounding Stagge book! I do love the mysteries appearing under that particular name. I'll have to see what I can do about getting my hands on this one...
ReplyDeleteIt's amazing to me with the all the GA reprinting going on, Bev, that these have not been reprinted yet in this recent wave.
DeleteJohn is so right about Webb and Wheeler's bevy of hunks. It's amazing to me that mystery reviewers missed this aspect of their books for so long. Apparently unless you had characters marching in a pride parade and unfurling rainbow banners such text went unnoticed.
More Stagge - this is always good news! Thanks John and for once I do in fact have this! Actually, the edition I have is a slightly unusual paperback edition published under the original DARLING DAUGHTERS title in Europe by A/B Ljus Forlag in Stockholm in 1946 and in English as part of their 'Ljus Crime Library' range.
ReplyDeleteI saw that among the copies for sale and thought it was a translated Swedish edition. Couldn't find a photo of it though. There was an Austrian outfit that did the same thing -- publishing English language paperbacks -- in the 1930s, but obviously stopped after 1939. I just found a German edition and added that one to the post!
DeleteI have the English edition (the "cheap" edition).
ReplyDeleteHow nasty? Jeez, if it impressed you with its ghastliness, then I think I'll pass, John. Although I do like a good poisoning tale. Not that I'd have any luck in finding a copy of this one, looks like. But it does sound intriguing - all that silver polish minutiae. Who knew? It's a wonder anyone made it out of the 19th century.
ReplyDeletePoison murders are some of the most nightmarish, IMO. Think of what Christie did: anthrax bacteria in a shaving brush, the mysterious poisonings in THE PALE HORSE where the victims' hair fell out prior to their last gasp, a bandage taken from a cat's ear infection applied to a man's wound as his "clean" dressing. She was nasty! I bet you already one (maybe all three) of those books and you survived those readings relatively unscathed I'm sure. ;^)
DeleteI refuse to even hint at how it is done. I literally gasped when I realized what was going to happen. That rarely happens to me when reading these books these days. Luckily, no animals were harmed in this book. By the 1940s Wilson and Wheeler finally exorcised their imaginations of vivisection and animal torture scenes.
Sorry for the late response, but I'm catching up on my blog reading and wanted to point out the acid poisoning from Murder in Mesopotamia. One of the nastiest poisoning deaths in all of mystery fiction, bar none!
DeleteThanks for reminding me there's yet another mystery writer waiting for me to return to.
I think the animal stuff came from Webb, I imagine there was experience at his pharmaceutical company. Enjoyed the review, by the way!
ReplyDeleteI only just learned that he had a chemistry background. It was in his very brief bio on the GAD Wiki page for Patrick Quentin. No wonder drugs and chemistry and scientific experiments crop up all the time in his books with his various collaborators. I'll have to remember that when I get to the Peter Duluth series none of which I've read yet.
DeleteJohn, you are right, that is is a lovely cover with skulls (the top one). And then the teapot with a skull. How wonderful. I will have to look around and keep an eye out for one I can afford.
ReplyDeleteYou and Yvette are neck and neck in the race for most entertaining reviews thus far this week of books I probly will never come across--by accident or design. You make Death, My Darling Daughters sound almost like a parody, which, read today, might actually be an unintended one.
ReplyDeleteBingo! I did try to make this review more lighthearted and tongue-in-cheek. You can't really take these kinds of books too seriously. I've always felt that many of the detective novels that rely heavily on puzzles and bizarre murders belong more to fantasy fiction than crime fiction.
DeleteThis sounded intriguing anyway, but your line about the murder method is killer (as one might say) so want to read it now. My own worst murder method is in PD James Shroud for a Nightingale, another horrible poisoning. And it was recently joined by Ngaio Marsh's Artists in Crime, non-poison. Neither of these is particularly mysterious (as methods, not as culprits) but both give me shudders whenever I think of them.
ReplyDeleteIt's an interesting topic, hard to do without spoilers, but of some interest to readers...
I just finished reading it, motivated by your review. I think the story is fairly good, with some of the characters being a bit "stock". What stood out for me was the emotional strength of the last chapter. I teared up.
ReplyDelete