The Z Murders
J. Jefferson Farjeon
Poisoned Pen/British Library Crime
Classics, Sep 1 2015, $12.95
ISBN 9781464204913
Riding the rails to foggy London, Richard
Temperley increasingly becomes frustrated and angry at an elderly loud mouth
when he is awake and even louder snorer disturbing the passengers. Thus when his train arrives at
atmospherically depressing Euston Station, Temperley feels relief as he assumes
no more of this boor. Since his flat is
rented out for another week and not wanting to wake up his sister’s household
at 5 AM, Temperley checks into a hotel just across from the station. To his chagrin, the irritant John Amble goes
there too. Ample falls asleep in an armchair,
but someone fires a shot through a window into his heart.
Police Detective Inspector James leads the
investigation. He finds a red metallic
token shaped like the letter Z near the victim.
Like others at the hotel, James also questions Temperley, who conceals
from the DI that a woman he earlier noticed vanished. Though he cannot explain why even to himself,
Temperley searches for the missing female.
Mindful of the 1959 Hitchcock film North by
Northwest, this reprint of a thrilling 1932 suspense grips the audience from
start to finish. Although filled with
too much happenchance, J. Jefferson Farjeon (see recently
republished Thirteen Guests) provides a fun
“historical” amateur sleuth starring foggy London, a bungling hero, a femme
fatale damsel in distress and a diligent killer.
Harriet Klausner
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