#1390: “Circumstances might arise when a murder would be the only way out of a difficulty.” – Continental Crimes [ss] (2017) ed. Martin Edwards

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Christmas is done for another year, and so my mind turns to the summer holidays and the possibilities of Europe. Yeah, it’s early to be planning this sort of thing, but I like to be prepared. And so naturally it is the British Library’s collection Continental Crimes [ss] (2017) that I crack open for research

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#1389: Truth Comes Limping (1938) by J.J. Connington

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How better to commemorate the birth of one J.C. than by exploring the work of another? And so to Truth Comes Limping (1938), the seventeenth mystery by Alfred Walter Stewart writing as J.J. Connington and the thirteenth to feature his detective Chief Constable Sir Clinton Driffield. And, once more with this author, I find myself swimming against the apparent direction of opinion: Nick Fuller rated this at 2/5, Martin Edwards calls it “very disappointing”, and Curtis Evans dismisses it as a “lackluster mystery plot with dull characters and turgid writing”. And so, of course, I really rather enjoyed it — sure, it’s at the weaker end of the four-star ratings I’ve given Connington elsewhere, but for sheer Humdrum delights it’s rather fine.

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#1388: No Police Like Holmes – The Whole Art of Detection: Lost Mysteries of Sherlock Holmes [ss] (2017) by Lyndsay Faye

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Lest we forget, I was not enamoured of Lyndsay Faye’s Sherlock Holmes novel Dust and Shadow (2009), but her characterisation was strong, people seem to rate her pastiches, and Holmes arguably finds his firmest feet in the short stories. And so to Faye’s anthology of Holmes stories The Whole Art of Detection [ss] (2017) do we turn today.

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#1386: Case with No Conclusion (1939) by Leo Bruce

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Another man accused of murder, another family member going to an amateur detective to prove his innocence. The classics don’t wear, do they? This time it is Stewart Ferrers accused of murdering local GP Dr. Benson late at night in his own home, and Stewart’s brother Peter who goes to ex-Sergeant Wm. Beef, now set up as a private enquiry agent, in the hope that evidence can be uncovered to cast doubt on the conviction. And along for the ride is Beef’s faithful-if-frustrated chronicler Townsend (now called Lionel despite calling himself Stuart at the end of the previous novel…) who hopes that something interesting might come of this to put him on equal footing with other novelists who relate the cases of their famous detectives.

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#1383: The Man Who Died Seven Times (1995) by Yasuhiko Nishizawa [trans. Jesse Kirkwood 2025]

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For as long as he can remember, 16 year-old Hisataro Oba has found himself randomly, several times a month, caught in a time loop he dubs The Trap: waking up on the same day nine times in a row, with only the events of the final day of the loop becoming the canon version of the day for everyone else in existence. Having realised this, and in part as a coping mechanism, he has been able to exploit The Trap — cheat on a test, win a bet, etc. — but now things are different. Because now a murder has been committed and he would like, if possible, to avert it in the ninth and final version so that it does not become the reality for everyone else.

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#1382: No Police Like Holmes – The Return of Moriarty (2025) by Jack Anderson

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Donning my waders to enter the fetid waters of Sherlock Holmes pastichery, I was prepared to kiss a lot of frogs on the way to a prince or two. But with The Return of Moriarty (2025) by Jack Anderson I’ve stumbled over a very handsome prince indeed far sooner than I’d ever hope — put simply, it’s wonderful, and if you’re a fan of Arthur Conan Doyle’s Holmes universe then you need a copy of this book in your life.

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#1381: A Little Help for My Friends – Finding a Modern Locked Room Mystery for TomCat Attempt #29: Murder Most Haunted (2025) by Emma Mason

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One haunted house. One impossible crime. One killer weekend. Thus runs the promise on the front cover of Murder Most Haunted (2025), the debut novel of Emma Mason, and that was enough to get in on my TBR as a modern example of the impossible crime that we’re no longer pretending I read just for TomCat‘s sake. So, did it deliver on those promises?

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