Monday, January 10, 2011

The Case of the First Mystery Novelist

by Paul Collins

Published: January 7, 2011, New York Times

Reader, never mind whether the butler did it. Here’s a real mystery for you: Who wrote the first detective novel?

For years, the usual suspect was Wilkie Collins, who made the great leap from Poe’s short stories to the Victorian triple-decker novel with The Moonstone,” published in 1868. Across the Channel, there was Émile Gaboriau and his Monsieur Lecoq, who made his first appearance a few years earlier in “L’Affaire Lerouge,” though Arthur Conan Doyle later had Sherlock Holmes declare Lecoq “a miserable bungler.”

In 1975, however, the novelist and critic Julian Symons revealed in The Times of London a veritable hidden panel in the library of detective literature: a third novel that predates them both. It was “The Notting Hill Mystery,” an anonymous eight-part serial that ran in Once a Week magazine starting on Nov. 29, 1862. But the book itself presented something of a mystery.

“It is unnecessary for us to state by what means the following papers came into our hands. . . . ,” the editors of Once a Week declared. And that was just the problem. Symons pointed out that nobody knew who the author — identified by the pseudonym Charles Felix when the novel was released in book form in 1865 — really was.

But reader, I know whodunit.

First, the murders. “The Notting Hill Mystery” begins in London, where the wife of Baron R** dies after sleepwalking into his home laboratory and drinking a bottle of acid. It looks like a tragic accident, until a private investigator, Ralph Henderson, notices that the baron took out five life insurance policies on Madame R**, worth a staggering £25,000. Hired by an insurance company, Henderson descends into a maze of intrigue that is perfectly and deliriously Victorian: there’s a diabolical mesmerist, kidnapping by gypsies, mysterious carnival girls, slow-poisoners and a rich uncle’s will. Oh, and murder . . . or rather, three murders.


“The Notting Hill Mystery,” published with illustrations by George Du Maurier (the grandfather of Daphne), was extraordinarily innovative. It is presented as Henderson’s own findings — diary entries, family letters, depositions of servant girls, even a chemical analyst’s report. Its crime-scene map and reproduced “evidence” were ideas that wouldn’t gain currency again until the 1920s. The book is both utterly of its time and utterly ahead of it. Symons, writing in 1975, admitted it “quite bowled me over.”

The full piece and name of author at the New York Times.  

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

John Dickinson is a former resident of Preesall, Lancashire, England. During the 1970´s he used a walking stick to help him walk. He also wore a flat black cap even in the summer. He lived near the Saracens Head pub in the small village. The concrete bust at the Saracens Head closely resembles the offensive Danish Cartton drawing of Mohammed (http://www.saracensheadpreesall.co.uk/Gallery.html) Please will people post any information or their recollections of John Dickinson Preesall on this blog. He was apparently a "Smashing Old Chap".

Anonymous said...

The following signed a letter, published in the Times, for peace with Hitler's Germany. Lord Arnold, Captain Bernard Ackworth, Prof. Sir Raymond Beazley, Mr. C.E Carroll, and Sir. John Smedley Crooke, M.P., Mr. W.H. Dawson, Admiral Sir, Barry Domville, Mr. A.E.R Dyer, Lord Fairfax of Cameron, Viscount Hardinge of Penshurst, Mr. F.C Jarvis, Mr. Douglas Jerrold, Sir. John Latta, Prof. A.P Laurie, The Marquess of Londonderry, Vice-Admiral V.B Molteno, Captain A.H Maule Ramsey, M.P., Mr. Wilmot Nicholson, Lord Redesdale, Captain Lane-Fox Pitt-Rivers, Capt. Arthur Rogers, OBE, Maj-Gen, Arthur Solly-Flood, Mrs. Nesta Webster, Mr. Bernard Wilson. The Times October 6, 1938.

Anonymous said...

Small cylindrical brass vials were found on a derelict allotment at the end of Lindel lane, Preesall in 1973/74. The numerical value of Lindel is 56 if all the letters are added together. Mrs. Scott was a very dominant school teacher at Preesall Fleetwood´s Charity school at the top of Mill Street and School lane. A parent complained about her conduct after she force fed a child during the school lunchtime. Mrs. Scott enjoyed her daily cup of tea almost with the same punctuality as Big Ben chimes in the New Year without fail every year. At the end of 1973 the head master Mr. Millward retired and a new head master was employed to run the school. His name was Mr. Bushell, he at first seemed daunted by the task ahead of him. There have never been any suggestions or allegations made against Mrs. Scott that she interfered with any school exams or reports, especially in the subject of Mathematics or that she carried out a vendetta against pupils who saw through her big act.

Anonymous said...

The Chairman of the School of Governors at Fleetwood´s Charity school, Preesall is called Gordon Mc Cann. He is an ellected Conservative politician and can be contacted on 0044 1253 811364. He should be able to answer questions about the history of the school.

Anonymous said...

Olga Boznańska (15 April 1865 in Kraków – 26 October 1940 in Paris), was a Polish painter.

Daughter of railway engineer Adam Nowina Boznański and Eugenia Mondan. Boznańska learned drawing from Józef Siedlecki and Kazimierz Pochwalski and studied at the Adrian Baraniecki School for Women. From 1886-1890 she studied in private schools of Karl Kricheldorf and Wilhelm Dürr in Munich. From then on she devoted herself mostly to portraits, still lifes and occasionally landscapes. In 1898 she moved to Paris. Her most famous portrait of a child Girl with Chrysanthemums fascinated her contemporaries by its symbolist atmosphere and psychological insight.

Boznańska received the French Legion of Honour in 1912, the Golden Laurel of the Polish Academy of Academic Literature in 1936 and in 1938 she was awarded the Order of Polonia Restituta.