Thursday, December 18, 2025

Repressed Spinsters (Overture to Death, Marsh 1939)

Ngaio Marsh. Overture to Death (1939) Winton St Giles parish hall needs a new piano. The fundraiser will be a play. The cast comprises the squire Jocelyn Jerningham, his son Henry, his spinster cousin Eleanor Prentice, the Vicar’s daughter Diana Copeland, Doctor Templett and his mistress Selia Ross, and the other spinster, Idris Campanula. She’s the victim, shot through head when she stomps on the soft pedal on the old piano, which, via a series of pulleys and twine, pulls the trigger of a gun wedged into the old instrument for just this purpose.

Alleyn and crew have to pick their way though the usual mix of relevant and irrelevant information. The novel is really a study of Freudian repressions. The two spinsters loathe each other, but are united in their fascination with and censure of other people’s sex lives. Both have designs on the vicar. And so on. Marsh is very good at depicting hypocrisy and other evils. This makes her books more than mere puzzles to be solved.

Recommended. *** 

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Boomps-A-Daisy Timing Solves the Crime (Death and the Dancing Footman, Ngaio Marsh 1942)

Ngaio Marsh. Death and the Dancing Footman (1942). A re-read, and more enjoyable because this time I could see how Marsh constructed the pu...