Book 50 in the Detective Club Crime Classics series is Carolyn Wellsâ Murder in the Bookshop, a classic locked room murder mystery which will have a special resonance for lovers and collectors of Golden Age detective fiction. Includes a bonus murder story: âThe Shakespeare Title-Page Mysteryâ.
When Philip Balfour is found murdered in a New York bookstore, the number one suspect is his librarian, a man who has coveted Balfourâs widow. But when the police discover that a book worth $100,000 is missing, detective Fleming Stone realises that some people covet rare volumes even more highly than other menâs wives, and embarks on one of his most dangerous investigations.
A successful poet and childrenâs author, Carolyn Wells discovered mystery fiction in her forties and went on to become one of Americaâs most popular Golden Age writers. Penning 82 detective novels between 1909 and her death in 1942, she was mourned in 1968 by the great John Dickson Carr as one of mystery fictionâs âlost ladies now well lostâ, and remains undeservedly neglected 50 years later. Murder in the Bookshop is a story laced with criminality, locked rooms and bookish intricacies that any bibliophile will find irresistible.
This Detective Club hardback is introduced by award-winning writer and authority on Golden Age detective fiction, Curtis Evans, and includes âThe Shakespeare Title-Page Mysteryâ, a murderous tale of literary shenanigans that was one of the last pieces of detective fiction which Carolyn Wells ever published.
Reviews
âThe detective story must seem real, in the sense that fairy tales seem real to children.â Carolyn Wells
âA vintage murder mystery from a popular and prolific crime writer.â GADetection.com
About the author
Carolyn Wells (1870-1942) was an American parodist and anthologist. Born in Rahway, New Jersey, and nearly deaf from the age of six, Wells became a librarian and later in life married Hadwin Houghton (son of publisher Bernard Houghton of Houghton Mifflin). She collected anthologies of nonsense and wrote several Sherlock Holmes parodies. Wells wrote 82 mystery novels, most featuring the bookish detective Fleming Stone, the first of which, The Clue (1909) is on the Haycraft-Queen Cornerstone List of essential mysteries. She also wrote a non-fiction instructional work, The Technique of the Mystery Story (1913).