Friday, November 17, 2017

FFB: Murder under Construction - Sue MacVeigh

THE STORY: Enter the exciting world of railway construction in the pre World War 2 era. No really. Come on along. It's not as boring as you might think. At least not in the hands of Sue MacVeigh, the ostensible author of Murder under Construction (1939) and the narrator and wife of railway detective Andy MacVeigh. Her husband has been hired to find out if a series of accidents are actually attempts to murder Winthrop Mason, the head of a railway bridge construction job in Slocum, New York. Andy has asked Sue to tag along as his Watson. They're going to pose as a civil engineer and his wife and infiltrate the small colony of engineers and contractors to find out who might want Mason dead. But someone still manages to kill the much loathed engineer and MacVeigh's job leads him to collaborating with the police in a murder investigation.

THE CHARACTERS: A large cast requires extra concentration so the list of characters and their relationships at the front of the book was extremely helpful in keeping everyone sorted out. Mason married into a wealthy family of railway people. His wife Gwendolyn, the daughter of the railway president, is a beautiful young woman very protective of her husband's reputation which as the story unfolds turns out to be pretty much a sham. Mason knew next to nothing at all about construction, let alone the intricate physics behind railway bridge construction. As Andy and Sue dig into the lives of the construction crew they learn that Mason was most likely responsible for ruining the project. The bridge is already collapsing due to poor judgment, bad planning and inferior materials. Andy reveals that Mason was faking his knowledge and putting everyone else's reputations at risk, to say nothing of the dangers and unsafe conditions at the bridge site. Motives are aplenty among the workers when Andy further learns of the anger and hatred that have been brewing around Mason's inept handling of the project.

Hillman Publ. #10, 1948
(digest paperback)
Perhaps the most fascinating element of the story is the subplot involving of the wives of the railway engineers. Sue learns that they are a close knit group of women who share nearly every facet of their lives with one another. She uncovers some secrets including a burgeoning extramarital romance. Between the professional rivalry and the bedroom shenanigans Sue and Andy have their hands full of possible murder suspects.

INNOVATIONS: Mason's murder is utterly mysterious. He's found halfway between his home and the construction site with his head bashed in. The ground is fairly muddy but there are no footprints around the body. No murder weapon can be found. It's a nearly impossible murder. One of the women turns out to be a highly skilled baseball player, especially in pitching. Sue remembers the affair and rampant jealousies leading her to believe that the woman might have thrown some heavy object at Mason from her backyard which abuts the murder scene. But the solution is much more complex and horrifying. The murder means, the weapon itself, is one of the most unusual choices to kill someone.

Andy and Sue are one of the better husband/wife sleuthing teams from this era. There is no artificiality in their banter; they are devoted to one another, very much in love; both are intelligent and exacting in their detection. Thankfully, Sue shows not an iota of light hearted whimsy (Haila Troy), vapid domesticity (Anne MacNeill) or absent-minded wackiness (Pam North). Too many wives in these detective duos act as the Gracie Allen of the piece and can have a tendency to irritate. While Andy is the lead detective dealing mostly with police and engineers Sue does her fair share of noticing the tell-tale clues and making suggestions to her husband that will lead them to the final solution.

THINGS I LEARNED: Obviously the setting itself and the microcosm of this railway construction village is teeming with opportunities to educate a curious reader. You learn all about the physics and math and geometry knowledge needed on a construction site of such complexity. And the human element of how the wives figure into the world of the project both as advisors and advocates was even more fascinating than all the work and labor involved. The role of women in this mystery was much more involved that I ever would have expected.

THE AUTHOR: "Sue MacVaigh" is obviously a pseudonym. Hardcore vintage mystery fans know this gimmick of character-as-author was used frequently in Golden Age crime fiction as exemplified in everything from the Philo Vance and Ellery Queen books to the short-lived Gale Gallagher series I wrote about two years ago. In reality the writer was Elizabeth Custer Nearing, a newspaper reporter living in New Jersey who wrote for three different newspapers including the New York Telegram and Philadelphia Ledger. She was married to a civil engineer involved in the railway business. Based on those credentials I'm guessing that everything you read in Murder under Construction is 100% accurate. This was her debut mystery novel and she went on to pen three other mysteries featuring the MacVeighs involved with trains, the railway business and murder. Her second novel Grand Central Murder, was turned into a very good movie with Van Heflin starring as an Andy MacVeigh stand-in named Rocky Custer. You can find it at various online movie websites for free since it has apparently has fallen into the public domain.

EASY TO FIND? MacVeigh's first two books turn up more often than the others in the series. Currently there are eight copies of Murder under Construction and four of Grand Central Murder. One copy of the book reviewed here is being sold for only $12. Hurry before it's gone! These books were published only in the US, yet even with reprints from Grosset & Dunlap and paperback digest editions all four titles are still scarce. Ah well. Did you really think otherwise? Libraries and used bookstores may turn up a copy or two. I serendipitously found my copy of Murder Under Construction in a Boise, Idaho bookshop on our vacation this past summer. That it came with a undamaged DJ in nearly pristine condition was astounding to me. And at only $22 I felt like I was stealing it from the bookstore owner.

Sue & Andy MacVeigh Detective Novels
Murder under Construction (1939)
Grand Central Murder (1939)
Streamlined Murder (1940)
The Corpse and the Three Ex-Husbands (1941)

14 comments:

  1. I'd find these interesting as I've long had an interest in railroads. I'll see if I can find a copy (maybe that inexpensive one).

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    1. There are even more copies than I first wrote about, Rick. I've amended my post to reflect that her first three books were reprinted by Grosset & Dunlap and there are in fact several digest reprints of at least three of her four book, too.

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  2. Enjoyed your review as usual, John. And of course I've never heard of this author but now that you have intrigued me, I'll be keeping an eye out for a copy of any three of these. GRAND CENTRAL MURDER seems familiar to me and that's probably because I saw the movie at some point in the past. Think I'll look for it again.

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    1. The movie is very easy to find for free. I watched Grand Central Murder for the first time on YouTube this past summer. The plot is significantly changed for the movie and employs a truly bizarre murder method that I don't think occurs in the book.

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  3. I did like the movie GRAND CENTRAL and you make this sounds fab - thanks John, you do the body and spirit good uncovering these books, you really do :)

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    1. As long as the regulars keep coming back I'll keep digging up these lost treasures, Sergio. :^)

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  4. Sue MacVeigh's work impresses me as potential reprint material for a publisher like Coachwhip!

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    1. Now there's an idea. Hope Chad is reading this.

      Over the summer I found a multitude of very interesting women mystery writers with arcane subject matter like this one. I don't know where I'm going to find the time to discuss all of them here before the year is out. I've been toying with starting a separate blog devoted solely to underrated and overlooked American women crime fiction writers from the 1890s through 1965. That would cause a mild sensation, I think.

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    2. Speaking of female mystery writers, my next review will be looking at one that you recommended and were very enthusiastic about. Honestly, I probably would have never given this author a second glance had it not been for your seal of quality. Well, your seal and a locked room angle. Because, hey, you know me. ;)

      Hope to have it up over the next couple of days.

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  5. I have a copy of Grand Central Murder -- the film -- and was sufficiently interested earlier this year to see if anything of MacVeigh's was available in print, but the prices for what was available made me blanch. Now your excellent review has only made me more determined to track them down, darn it ;-)

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    1. Several affordable copies of this one, Noah. A G&D reprint for $10 and several copies of the Hillman digest all for under $15. Of course with you living in western Canada the shipping may make them not at all affordable.

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  6. I'm getting intimidated reading these reviews of books and author totally unfamiliar to me. Where in hell have I been all my life? My saving grace of late is that I no longer buy hardcopy books. If it's not an ebook, I feel justified in passing. I would like to read Under Construction, tho.

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    1. Well that'll eliminate this writer from your list, Mathew. Not an ebook in sight from her backlist. Maybe some Internet pirate will rectify that soon.

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  7. The problem is John, where to get these books??????????

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