Ngaio Marsh. Death At the Bar (1939) A rather unpleasant, overbearing King’s Counsel is the victim. The weapon is a poisoned dart set up in the bar of the Plume of Feathers, hence the title. The poison apparently had to travel from a locked cabinet to the dartboard in full view of a roomful of people. The impossibility creates the puzzle. The usual complications of fraught personal relationships, complicated family histories, and so on, further muddled by a political movement of dubious utility, create the maze that Alleyn must navigate.
I enjoyed this reread, mostly because Marsh’s novels are contemporary, which has now made them historical fictions, which spells nostalgia for old fogies like me. Post-war England into the mid-1950s was not so very different from the 1930s and 40s. It was the 1960s that transformed England, and by that time I was in Canada. A good read, recommended for any Marsh fan or for the classic puzzle whodunit. ***
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