Showing posts with label Horler; Sydney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horler; Sydney. Show all posts

Monday, February 19, 2018

#23 - The False Purple by Sydney Horler (1932)

dustjackets.com


About this selection: This edition was supposed to contain Baffle Case Number Four, as well as the solution to Baffle Case Number Two, The Crime at Laurel Lodge (presented in #21, Murder in the French Room). However, the Baffle Cases seem to be foundering in this ominous sign for the sustainability of the Mystery League. There is only this brief mention on the dust jacket flap: "Due to the extreme length of Mr. Horler's tale, the Baffle Case [#4] planned for this month has been omitted and the results of the contests regarding The Crime at Laurel Lodge individually sent [to] all contestants."


Sydney Horler (photo: vintage45.wordpress.com)

About the author: Here is a Wikipedia article about Sydney Horler. He has two other titles in the Mystery League series: The Curse of Doone and Peril! 

Principal characters:



  • Elsie Spain, a.k.a. "Venetia", a clothing model; tricked into assuming the identity of Princess Corisande of Caronia.
  • Susy Jarvis, Elsie's roommate
  • Mrs. Sarah Goodbody, a.k.a. "Yolande", owner of the dress salon
  • Philip Wendover, who inherited a newspaper The Messenger
  • Beryl Trentham, a.k.a. "The Imp", 20, staff officer of the G.O.G. feminist group, cousin of Philip Wendover
  • Charles Zuberra, a.k.a. Charles Chapelle, Baron Fuipo
  • Sybil Trent, a.k.a. Sybil Chapelle
  • Millie Vandefield, a.k.a. Comptesse Lépiney, the "largest woman in Paris"
  • -- Vanelli, forger and blackmailer
  • Rafael Giraud, discredited backstreet doctor, a hunchback
  • Detective Inspector George Lomax of Scotland Yard, friend of Philip Wendover

Locale: London and Paris

Synopsis:


Refined Elsie Spain, used to life with a wealthy family, finds herself destitute after the death of her parents. She winds up in a cheap rooming house with her roommate Susy Jarvis. She takes a job modelling clothes (as a 'mannequin' named Venetia) in a swank salon ("Yolande's") owned by Mrs. Sarah Goodbody, who prefers using "Yolande" as her name.


At a dinner party, a Mr. & Mrs. Charles Chapelle take a shine to Venetia, and invite her into their home with puzzling comments that they want to make her "a princess". 


The Chapelles are not what they seem, it is an identity assumed by crooks Charles Zuberra and Sybil Trent. They have noticed that Elsie bears a resemblance to the late Princess Corisande of Caronia, believed to have been killed in a revolution. Zuberra and Trent hatch a plan to have Elsie pose as the obligatory rediscovered-with-amnesia princess in order to defraud her patron Comptesse Lépiney and claim the Corisande's estate.


The action moves to Paris, where Elsie is taken to Comptesse Lépiney's. A struggle ensues between those trying to convince her she is the lost princess, and those who know she is not.

Review:


First, keep a pencil handy to keep track of the players. By my count, five characters have two different names each, and two characters have three names! See above painstakingly-compiled list to keep them straight.


The scam of the beautiful commoner posing as the obligatory lost-princess-who-had-amnesia sounds like we will be in for some great fun, reminiscent of The Prisoner of Zenda and anything written by Manning Coles. Half of the fun is watching the characters trying to keep track of which name they are known by with various people.


Like other Sydney Horler thrillers, this is not a murder mystery (although one minor character is knocked off in an unusual and somewhat amusing manner) but rather a fast-paced adventure thriller.

Tuesday, November 21, 2017

#11 - Peril! by Sydney Horler (1930)

dustjackets.com


About this edition: This edition has just the novel, with no promotional or preview material. This is one of five titles released simultaneously in a Christmas boxed set. These are the only five titles appearing in the green cloth binding.



Sydney Horler (photo: vintage45.wordpress.com)

About the author: Here is a Wikipedia article about Sydney Horler. He has two other titles in the Mystery League series: The Curse of Doone and The False Purple.

Characters:

  • Jimmy Hannay, former officer and gentleman; now down and out
  • Delia Miller, target of attempted theft
  • Sebastian Miller, Delia's father; wealthy stockbroker
  • Adele Miller, Sebastian's trophy wife, stepmother to Delia
  • Horace Bray - Miller's financial secretary
  • William Simmons - Miller's servant
  • Kurt Zweig, master criminal, enemy of Sebastian Miller
  • Hubert Dorman, wealthy criminal who works for Zweig
  • Oscar Scanlon, a muscle who works for Zweig
  • Johnson, another henchman
  • Inspector Richard Pudan, Scotland Yard

Locale: England

Synopsis: Jimmy Hannay is destitute and homeless. Hubert Dorman picks him up one night with an offer of a job, which turns out to be an accomplice in an attempted jewelry theft from Delia Miller. Hannay realizes what is happening, thwarts the theft, and escapes from Dorman. Delia's father, Sebastian Miller, now offers him employment. Adele Miller, Sebastian's trophy wife, is used to getting what she wants. She makes a pass at Jimmy who rejects her.

Sebastian Miller is worried for his daughter's safety, and moves out to his country place, Steep Holm, along with Hannay. He hopes to keep her away from his enemy, Kurt Zweig, and his henchmen. Miller is working on a financial plan which is valuable to Zweig, and one of the henchmen is electrocuted while trying to enter the estate to steal it. 


Hannay is injured when he catches Adele Miller and an unknown man trying to steal the financial plan. He and Delia work to recover the plan and catch the culprits, falling into various distresses.


Yikes! This title needs more readers!





Tuesday, August 15, 2017

#2 - The Curse of Doone by Sydney Horler (1930)

photo: dustjackets.com


About this edition: This edition has just the novel, with no promotional or preview material.


Sydney Horler (photo: vintage45.wordpress.com)

About the author: Here is a Wikipedia article about Sydney Horler. He has two other titles in the Mystery League series: Peril! and The False Purple.

Characters:
  • Ian Heath / "Ronald Gavin", agent of the Foreign Branch of the British Secret Service
  • Jerry Hartsgill, old school chum of Ian Heath
  • Harker Bellamy, Heath's superior
  • Joe and Mrs. Dorrance, Heath's landlord and landlady
  • Cicely Garrett, American, recent resident of Doone Hall
  • Warren Murdoch, uncle of Cicely Garrett, inventor, and patriarch of Doone Hall
  • James Neale, butler of Doone Hall; and his wife Janet
  • Moses Grinstead, lawyer
  • Philip Voyce, neighbor to Doone Hall; although six miles distant
  • Professor Sapford, friend of Warren Murdoch
  • -- Gibson, local ex-con who lurks around the Hall
  • Gusta Straub, the woman with the monocle
  • Victor Von Kroon, the man with the scar
Locale: Doone Hall, Dartmoor, England

Synopsis: Ian Heath becomes enchanted with Cicely Garrett after two chance encounters in London. She lives at Doone Hall, mysterious home of her reclusive inventor uncle Warren Murdoch, on the lonely moors of Dartmoor. A flying figure, similar to a giant bat, is seen flying around outside of the Hall sometimes at night. Legend identifies it as the former owner, Vernon Coxonfield, a vampire - who is buried beneath the cellar floors of Doone Hall.

At attempt is made on the life of Ian Heath, and he allows news of his 'death' to circulate so he may investigate without interference. Ian travels to Dartmoor to stay with Jerry Hartsgill, who has a cottage near Doone Hall.

Cicely, in the obligatory nightgown-carrying-a-candle, explores a corridor of the Hall, and encounters a man with half a face.

Warren Murdoch hides his invention in the Hall, and confides details of his invention to his colleague, Professor Sapford, who is murdered soon after - apparently by a vampire. This is followed by the similar death of Moses Grinstead. Murdoch dies (of natural causes) which leads to a search for the invention.

Comments: Book contains stereotypical terms for African-Americans, unacceptable today but were in common use at time of writing.