Sunday, March 9, 2014

A question of identity

The China Governess, Margery Allingham

Margery Allingham wrote the first of her novels with Albert Campion (as a secondary character) in 1929, and the last was finished by her husband after her death, in 1968.  As you might expect, there is quite a variety in the stories over almost 40 years, and I am sure that readers have their favorites.  I admit, I have been pleasantly surprised by how good her last books have been, both Tether's End from 1958, and this one, from 1962.  That isn't always the case with long series of books, particularly those written over so many years.

The story opens with a strange and violent break-in at a new housing development in Turk Street, once called "the wickedest street in London" and still recovering from the devastation of the Blitz.  No one can imagine why the elderly residents, with their quiet lodger, were targeted, but more questions arise when the lodger suddenly disappears. The story then shifts to Timothy Kinnit.  The heir to a respected firm of antique dealers, he is taking his fiancée Julia Laurell down to the family's country home, to entrust her to his old nurse, Mrs. Broome.  Julia's father, a wealthy industrialist, has put their engagement on hold.  While everyone knows that Timothy was adopted by the Kinnits as a baby, it was always assumed that he was a son of the family, if an illegitimate one.  But gossip about the engagement has made people question whether that is actually the case.  It may be an impossible question to answer, because Timothy arrived at their home in a flood of refugees from the East End, in the first days of the war.  In the confusion, no one remembered who brought him, and after the war, when the Kinnits tried to trace him, they found that bombs had destroyed most of the records in that area of London.  The head of the family, Eustace Kinnit, simply adopted him, and he was accepted into the family.  But his potential father-in-law wants to know more, and now Timothy himself does too.

The Kinnits have hired a detective firm, the same firm that could find nothing back in the 1940s.  The Laurells on the other hand turn to Albert Campion.  Julia returns to London, refusing to sit quietly in the country and wait, ignoring her father's orders that she have nothing to do with Timothy while the investigation proceeds.  Insisting that it doesn't matter where Timothy came from, she loves him and will marry him just the same, she still tries to take a hand in the investigation.  Timothy, however, is haunted by what might lie in his past, especially when the trail seems to lead back to the slums of Turk Street.

I really enjoyed this book, which combines a psychological mystery about identity and inheritance with more traditional elements.  The story turns in surprising way, before Allingham ties it together so very neatly in the end.  There is a death that the Kinnits insist is from natural causes, but despite their haste to get the body buried, rumors of Timothy's involvement start to circulate as well.  The older Kinnits are particularly sensitive to rumors about murder, because in the 1840s the family's governess was accused of murdering her lover; though she was acquitted, she later committed suicide.  Campion's friend Superintendent Charlie Luke is drawn into the investigations, and he and Timothy's old nurse Mrs. Broome are such vivid characters that they tend to take over the story whenever they appear.  Campion, as he often does, fades into the background, while watching and listening to everything, picking up clues in the process that others overlook.  I was very happy to meet another old friend, the Cockney ex-burglar Magersfontein Lugg, once Campion's manservant, who still keeps up the old flat in Bottle Street.  I also enjoyed the historical aspect of the mystery, and I'm sure that Allingham drew on her own experiences dealing with war-time refugees, which she wrote about in The Oaken Heart.

9 comments:

  1. I'm glad to hear that you've been enjoying her later books. Having just finished Tiger in the Smoke, I'm now getting close to these final books, and I've been worried that I don't have anything much to look forward to. I don't expect these to be as live up to the standard of Tiger, but it's reassuring to hear that they are good reads. Now I can look forward to them!

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  2. Teresa, I found the one after Tiger (The Beckoning Lady) rather opaque, like More Work for the Undertaker - where I understood what happened, but felt like I was missing the a lot. I'll be interested to see what you think, when you get to it. But these last two have been great.

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  3. Great review! I have to admit that I'm not familiar with this author, but this book sounds like a good one...I like the setting and the time period especially.

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  4. I've still only read one Margery Allingham book - The White Cottage Mystery, which I enjoyed but I know it's not regarded as one of her better books so I'm looking forward to reading some of her others. Can you read this series in any order or is it best to start with the first one?

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  5. Lark, thanks for stopping by! Allingham is one of my favorites of the Golden Age mystery writers, with Josephine Tey, right after Dorothy L. Sayers.

    Helen, I think you can read them in any order (I did, as I found them). The early ones are lighter, almost PG Wodehouse-ish at times, as is Campion himself - and both he & the books get more serious as the series progresses.

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  6. I think I need to go to the early ones as the only one I've read is Tiger in the Smoke which I thought really over-dramatic. I should like her, I know - so am determined to give her another go.

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  7. vicki, you might find these last two over the top as well. With the early ones, I'm particularly fond of The Gryth Chalice Mystery, which has a touch of the supernatural.

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  8. I read a few Allingham's when I was in my early twenties, liked them, but she never became a favorite the way that Ngaio March did. I am all about giving authors second chances these days, though, and wonder how I would feel now. I think this one sounds really clever.

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  9. Anbolyn, it's funny, I had just the opposite reaction. I've read a few of the Marsh books (I like those with Troy the best), and I enjoyed them, but they didn't stick with me like these did.

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Thank you for taking the time to read, and to comment. I always enjoy hearing different points of view about the books I am reading, even if we disagree!