Murder in the Mill-Race, E.C.R. Lorac
Lorac starts this book by setting the scene, with a young doctor and his wife moving to an idyllic little village on the moor, self-contained and insular. They’re quickly accepted because of the doctor’s skills, of course, but there’s a little friction with a staple of the place: Sister Monica, a rather severe woman who rules over a little children’s home with an iron fist. Everyone says she’s “wonderful”, and yet there’s something forced about the superlative.
Since it’s a Golden Age crime novel, no surprises that Sister Monica is the one found dead, and that it unravels a whole snarl of issues in the little village. Lorac’s series detective, Macdonald, comes in to take a look — understanding the ways of a small village, but not bound by then, and able to cut some of the knots with plain-speaking and an inability to be rattled.
As always, Lorac is great with a sense of atmosphere: you can practically hear the sounds of the village, smell the scrubbed barren children’s home, feel the spray of the water in the mill race. The killer was the person I guessed, but Lorac avoided tying things up in too neat a bow: there are a couple of questions unresolved, and there’s no “sit all the culprits together in a room” moment. You do get a sense for how her detective works and how she likes to shape a mystery, after reading a few of her books — there are commonalities between this and her other books that felt a bit fresher the first time you read them.
Overall, though, Lorac’s ability to portray a place and a bunch of complicated characters remains a big draw, and I think her books are among the finer ones in the British Library Crime Classics collection (contrast Bude, for example, who I find entertaining but unremarkable as far as style goes).
I’m guessing Lorac is a pseudonym for Carol somebody or other? I’ve yet to get into any of these Golden Age reissues, they seem to be so uneven, but I’m glad you review them to help me decide yes or no!
Yes — she also has another book in this reissue set under “Carol Carnac”, but that doesn’t quite have the ring of a real name either… not sure though!
I think the series as a whole is interesting if you’re interested in the era — I am because I studied the development of crime fiction, and it’s fascinating to see what I learnt both corroborated but also complicated — but yeah… otherwise I recommend cherry-picking! I need to make sure I apply the tag to all of them so people can find the whole set.
Hmm, one site looking to acquire Carol Carnac original issues lists at least 23 books, so you may have your work cut out! Or at least those title reissued in this series. This link discusses those pseudonyms: http://www.classiccrimefiction.com/loracbiog.htm