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Who Killed Charmian Karslake?: An Inspector Stoddart Mystery: Volume 3 (The Inspector Stoddart Mysteries),

Who Killed Charmian Karslake?: An Inspector Stoddart Mystery: Volume 3 (The Inspector Stoddart Mysteries), by Annie Haynes

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Who Killed Charmian Karslake?: An Inspector Stoddart Mystery: Volume 3 (The Inspector Stoddart Mysteries), by Annie Haynes

Who Killed Charmian Karslake?: An Inspector Stoddart Mystery: Volume 3 (The Inspector Stoddart Mysteries), by Annie Haynes



Who Killed Charmian Karslake?: An Inspector Stoddart Mystery: Volume 3 (The Inspector Stoddart Mysteries), by Annie Haynes

Read and Download Who Killed Charmian Karslake?: An Inspector Stoddart Mystery: Volume 3 (The Inspector Stoddart Mysteries), by Annie Haynes

“Owing to the sudden death of Miss Charmian Karslake this theatre is closed until further notice. Money for tickets already booked will be refunded.”Who killed Charmian Karslake, the famous American actress, on the night of the ball at Hepton Abbey? Who was the mysterious Peter Hailsham who had been present at the ball and had since vanished into thin air? What was his connection, if any, with the respectable County family of Penn-Moreton at whose house the murder had taken place?How Inspector Stoddart and his assistant Harbord solve these questions, and the surprising discoveries they make in the course of their Investigations, form the basis for one of their most devilish mysteries.Who Killed Charmian Karslake? is the third of Annie Haynes' Inspector Stoddart Mysteries. First published in 1929, it was out of print for over 80 years until this new edition, which also features an introduction by crime fiction historian Curtis Evans.“A model detective story... a good mental exercise for the distracted reader who has just received his Super-Tax Demand. (The publishers) have again produced a good book.” London Mercury

Who Killed Charmian Karslake?: An Inspector Stoddart Mystery: Volume 3 (The Inspector Stoddart Mysteries), by Annie Haynes

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #31448 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-10-05
  • Released on: 2015-10-05
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Who Killed Charmian Karslake?: An Inspector Stoddart Mystery: Volume 3 (The Inspector Stoddart Mysteries), by Annie Haynes

About the Author

Annie Haynes was born in 1865, the daughter of an ironmonger. By the first decade of the twentieth century she lived in London and moved in literary and early feminist circles. Her first crime novel, The Bungalow Mystery, appeared in 1923, and another nine mysteries were published before her untimely death in 1929. Who Killed Charmian Karslake? appeared posthumously, and a further partially-finished work, The Crystal Beads Murder, was completed with the assistance of an unknown fellow writer, and published in 1930.


Who Killed Charmian Karslake?: An Inspector Stoddart Mystery: Volume 3 (The Inspector Stoddart Mysteries), by Annie Haynes

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Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A family of country gentry comes under suspicion of murder By Patto Charmian Karslake, celebrated American actress, accepts an invitation to a ball at the picturesque country estate of the Penn-Moretons. The morning after the ball she is found murdered.Inspector Stoddart handles the case with all his usual painstaking attention to detail. Everyone in the house party is suspect, particularly the male members of the aristocratic Penn-Moreton family. But as Stoddart digs into the past of the actress, he interviews people in all classes.These novels by Annie Haynes are a window into British society in the nineteen twenties with its varied class distinctions. It's also interesting to see how this British author portrays Americans.Who Killed Charmian Karslake appeared posthumously. It is a classic country house party mystery. The plot is thick with secrets. This is not my favorite Annie Haynes mystery, but it held my interest throughout.

3 of 4 people found the following review helpful. My first, so-so, experience with Annie Haynes. By Bradley Friedman “’Beastly mess the place seems to be in,’ grumbled Sir Arthur Penn-Moreton, looking round the room with a disgusted air.“’Well, if you will give balls you have to put up with the aftermath,’ said Dicky, his younger brother, screwing his monocle in his left eye as he spoke.“Dicky was already seated at the table devouring kidneys and bacon with apparent relish.”This is how Annie Haynes’ 1929 mystery Who Killed Charmian Karslake? opens. I counted about six clichés right there: the country house setting, just as we found at the beginning of E.R. Punshon’s Ten Star Clues, the bluff lord and his monocled fop of a younger brother sitting down to a heavy English breakfast the morning after a ball. All we need next is a murder to interrupt the proceedings. But what’s this? Here comes Brook, butler at Hepton Abbey, with news that the house’s celebrated guest, actress Charmian Karslake, cannot be roused behind the locked door of her bedroom.Frankly, the more intriguing mystery here is the story of Annie Haynes herself, a sickly woman whose friendship with a noted feminist named Ada Heather-Bigg, whose backing may have helped Haynes publish twelve mystery novels, two of them posthumously (including this one). I was intrigued by the story of Haynes that Curtis Evans unfolded in his blog, The Passing Tramp, and continued in the introduction to this novel. So I selected my favorite title from amongst the eight that have been reissued by Dean Street Press and settled down to read – and hopefully enjoy - another lost mystery from the Golden Age. Evidently, during her lifetime, Haynes enjoyed great popularity and was, at least for a time as Curtis writes in his introduction, “the main British female competitor to Agatha Christie.” I have to say that the fact that Christie and Haynes were the only female mystery writers to be published by The Bodley Head and that this company embraced Haynes while Christie did everything she could to get out of a bad deal – all this made me a bit leery as I approached this book. I fear my forebodings were not without cause.It’s hard not to compare this novel to the Punshon mystery I just read (and reviewed previously: ) Both involve a noble family, a country estate, and murder. The similarity ends there, however, for a number of reasons. First off, Haynes’ book feels more like a police procedural than a closed circle mystery. The focus here is largely on Detective Inspector Stoddart and his assistant Alfred Harbord. They have a likable relationship, and Harbord is hardly a lesser entity than his boss in terms of intellect and ability. Very little time is spent at the mansion interviewing the suspects. Instead, Stoddart and Harbord move about between the village of Hepton and London, trying to find out just who Charmian Karslake was and what the meaning of a certain overheard conversation might signify.Frankly, their detective work did not strike me as particularly impressive or thrilling, just lucky. (Every place Stoddart enters provides information. Whenever he needs to talk to somebody, that person can be found walking down the road in the Inspector’s direction.) And as they scurry about, Haynes springs more and more of those clichés that I fear have given Golden Age writers a bad name. As late as 1929, Hayne’s writing style seems Victorian, both in the turns of phrase, the melodramatic trappings, even the characters’ names that seem straight out of Dickens. There’s the American millionaire, Silas P. Juggs, who made his fortune in canned soup and pushes his way about the scene while everyone around him rolls their eyes. Worse even is Charmian’s French maid, Celestine Dubois, whom Haynes endows with an accent that could spread hard cheese:“Me! Me! I know nosin – nosin at all. Two days ago Mees Karslake, she tell me to pack her sings for dis ball, and I am pleased, for it is triste always in this land of fogs, when one goes out novere. But if I had known - “You get the idea. Compared to her, Christie’s way with foreigners is positively enlightened. Here’s a speech under similar circumstances, made by Louise Bourget, Linnet Doyle’s French maid in Christie’s Death on the Nile:“What could I have seen or heard? I was on the deck below. My cabin, it was on the other side of the boat, even. It is impossible that I should have heard anything. Naturally if I had been unable to sleep, if I had mounted the stairs, then perhaps I might have seen this assassin, this monster, enter or leave Madame’s cabin . . . “The villagers of Hepton speak with their own thick patois as well, and Dicky Penn-Moreton sounds (and looks) a great deal like Charlie McCarthy, Edgar Bergen’s dummy. The stilted dialogue is crammed to the gills with 1920’s slang, and yet I couldn’t shake the feeling that Haynes really didn’t know who or what she was writing about. I want to say that at least a reader can get a sense of the times, but these people – the rich, the poor, the police – all failed to convince me.Worse than that, the mystery plot amounted to too little: the clueing was simplistic, and the actions and reactions of characters often bordered on the nonsensical. To take just one example, one has to ask oneself why, mere days after a murder, the detective in charge would let all the suspects leave town – even the country! – just so he could have a free hand in searching the premises. Doesn’t Scotland Yard get to search wherever they want with impunity? Ah, what do I know?The hackneyed clichés – and I have to believe they were clichés even in 1929 – continue right till the end, and I would like nothing better than to discuss this ending with someone, but I’ve spoiled enough. Suffice it to say that rules are broken and fair play flies out the window, as far as I am concerned.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Five Stars By Catherine S. Great discovery of this author--Annie Haynes--if you enjoy Golden Age mysteries.

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Who Killed Charmian Karslake?: An Inspector Stoddart Mystery: Volume 3 (The Inspector Stoddart Mysteries), by Annie Haynes

Who Killed Charmian Karslake?: An Inspector Stoddart Mystery: Volume 3 (The Inspector Stoddart Mysteries), by Annie Haynes

Who Killed Charmian Karslake?: An Inspector Stoddart Mystery: Volume 3 (The Inspector Stoddart Mysteries), by Annie Haynes
Who Killed Charmian Karslake?: An Inspector Stoddart Mystery: Volume 3 (The Inspector Stoddart Mysteries), by Annie Haynes

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