THE STORY: Movie actress Madeleine Grey leaves the set of her film in progress up in Scotland to travel to London where she plans to meet with her insurance agent John Piper. Shortly before the meeting she appears to have vanished from the hotel. No one saw her leave: not Quinn, Piper's reporter friend waiting in the lobby; not the receptionist; not even the elevator operator. Where did she go? And how did she get out unseen? This apparent impossible mystery is soon complicated by two deaths, one a questionable accident and the other a definite murder.
THE CHARACTERS: Put Out That Star (1957) first attracted my attention because it was listed in Adey's Locked Room Murders as being an impossible mystery. But the ostensible mystery surrounding Madeleine's disappearance is easily figured out. Not just because there were multiple ways to leave the hotel (an emergency exit door leading to a fire escape, and a stairwell that leads to the ground floor right near the brasserie and cocktail bar) but because of the rather obvious way anyone can leave unnoticed. And I figured that part out instantly. But the story is a gripping one for the way Piper approaches the problem, for the intriguing friendship between Quinn, the nosy and often intrusive reporter who is friends with Piper, and the way Carmichael handles the supporting players who all seem to be acting a little too suspiciously or too indifferently regarding the disappearance of a celebrity guest in the hotel.
The oddest of the suspects is Sydney Noble, the hotel assistant manager who first treats Madeleine's disappearance aloofly. She'll turn up, he says repeatedly to Piper. But when days pass with no sign of the actress he gets nervous and worries about the hotel's reputation being damaged. That's on the surface. In reality he's more worried about himself and his job. He manages to convince Piper to turn private agent to try and locate the movie star before the press gets hold of the news and before he may be forced to call the police. Piper reluctantly agrees more because he wants his own curiosity satisfied.Piper also interviews Mrs. Airey. the hotel housekeeper for the third floor where Madeleine was staying, and learns about the flawed fire escape door that cannot be properly closed from the inside of the hotel. He also deals with Benny Seagar, talent agent, who has a couple of secrets he'd rather be left buried. But Piper digs them up all the same. Then there's Roy Mitchell, Madeleine's husband and the scriptwriter on her film. When his wife does not call him at 9 pm as they agreed he calls the hotel and learns that his wife is not there. He insists on driving down to the hotel and plans to do so in a single night.
INNOVATIONS: It's a shame the impossibility of sorts is so unimaginative. With the introduction of a single character at the story's midpoint it's fairly simple to solve the problem of how Madeleine left the hotel. Much of the mystery involves the recurring discussion of Madeleine and her fur coat which made her distinctively noticeable for anyone who a wasn't a film buff and could recognize her by her face. The fur coat is missing from her hotel room, though all of her luggage and clothing was left behind. Some bloodstains on one of her suitcases and the used washcloth in the bathroom are two major clues that bother Piper for the entirety of the story. They are also clues to figuring out what happened to Madeleine.Carmichael has a neat way in rendering cinematic action sequences. The story opens on February 27 and play outs over the following three days. The winter season plays a major part in the story and a severe winter gale acts as a menacing minor character endangering Piper's life as he pursues a lead involving a missing movie magazine. The outdoor sequences are handled sinisterly with the threatening weather conditions becoming almost a persona of villainy itself. These lent a noirish feel to the novel.
THE AUTHOR: "Harry Carmichael" was a pseudonym used by Leopold Ognall (1908-1979) who was born in Montreal then emigrated with his family to Scotland. In his early adulthood Ognall moved to Leeds where he married in 1932 and remained there for the rest of his life. He worked as a goods manager, a warehouse employee and was an ARP warden during the war years. He began his writing career as a journalist for a Scottish newspaper and apparently later gave up it to become a full time novelist. He wrote at least 84 novels using two different pseudonyms. As "Harry Carmichael" his mystery novels feature either John Piper or Quinn or both and follow the dictates of traditional whodunit style mysteries while as "Hartley Howard" he created Glenn Bowman, a private eye, and Philip Scott, a British Intelligence agent.
EASY TO FIND? There are a handful of the paperback reprint (Fontana Books #286, 1959) editions offered for sale from online booksellers. The UK 1st edition is rather scarce and I turned up only one copy with the equally scarce DJ from a well known vintage crime fiction seller on eBay. Five copies of the US edition retitled Into thin Air (Doubleday/Crime Club, 1958) are available for purchase, all with the DJ.




One of my favourite series: Piper-Quinn. Have this on my shelf.
ReplyDeleteI’ve only read two of these but I’m intrigued by John Piper and his haunted past. I’m trying to read the early books in as close to chronological order as I can to see how the friendship between Piper and Quinn alters and grows. These are rather good as novels and sometimes brilliant as mystery novels. But so far the mystery plots are very familiar and employ overused conventions and motifs. I just ordered one of the more lauded ones - Death Counts Three, aka The Screaming Rabbit. In the meantime I have two others to read— Death Leaves a Diary (the first of the John Piper books which I know you’ve reviewed) and Justice Enough. I also have The Motive but that’s a 1970s one and I’m waiting to read that after I get through all the 1950s books. I wish our library system had some of these books. But there are none! Probably whatever they had —and they had a huge collection of Doubleday Crime Club books back in the 1980s— were culled and pulped decades ago. […sigh…]
DeleteJohn, you are confusing me with someone else. I have read a few of Carmichael books but Death Leaves a Diary is not one of those. Like you, I read these books more for the Piper-Quinn friendship and how Piper gets over his grief. Unfortunately, I unknowingly read the last in the series so there are certain things I know. Yet I am interested in knowing the journey. Sorry, but I found The Screaming Rabbit very boring. I wonder how you would find it.
DeleteBTW, have you seen this post: https://crossexaminingcrime.com/2026/01/17/my-2100th-post-open-call-to-bloggers-which-classic-crime-novel-should-be-reprinted-next/
It is tailor made for you.
Leopold Ognall is new to this Montrealer, despite his birth. Consider me intrigued. I'll be interested to hear what you think about Death Counts Three.
ReplyDeleteOriginally I included that he comes from a Jewish family. Then I thought that’s probably just extraneous. So now I’m going to let you know that I thought it odd a Jewish family from Montreal would move to Scotland where the predominant religion at the time was Church of Scotland and Catholicism. I don’t have the exact date the family left there. Canadian home but I judging from information I got on a Jewish website that had interesting information about him (mostly related to his marriage to Cecilia and his obituary) I would guess that he was a teenager when he left Canada.
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