Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

Rum goings-on in enjoyable comic crime tale

- Review by Allan Massie

Murder at Holly House by Denzil Meyrick Bantam, 360pp, £16.99

Comic crime or criminal comedy is fairly rare. There is not much laughter in real-life crime and the more true-to-life crime novels are, the less one is inclined to laugh or even smile.

So it’s rare for authors to bring off the comic crime novel. A few have done it successful­ly: Edmund Crispin (The Moving Toyshop, Swansong), Robert Barnard (The Missing Bronte, Death in Purple Prose) and Ruth Dudley Edwards. So it’s a surprise to find Denzel Meyrick entering these lists.

Of course there is some comedy in Meyrick’s DCI Daley novels, but Murder at Holly House is a new departure and is full of agreeable absurdity.

The narrator is a Yorkshire policeman, Inspector Frank Grasby, who joined the police soon after the Second World War having failed – only just failed, he says – to have made the grade as a profession­al cricketer.

He is not the brightest or most competent of chaps, at least in the eyes of his crabbit old clergyman father and his superior officer, Superinten­dent Juggers, but, though aware of this, he has a complacent trust in his own abilities.

He is dispatched by Juggers to take charge of the police station in a moorland village where there seems to have been a crimewave. It’s winter and snowing and he gets there with difficulty.

His sergeant suffers from a medical condition which has him falling suddenly and soundly asleep.

There is, surprising­ly, an American girl intern – this a word scarcely known in England in the post-war years. It’s not clear why she is there, but she is very attractive which gives him hope. They are both billeted with an eccentric old woman who has a pet raven that sits on her shoulder.

To Grasby’s surprise there is a photograph there of his landlady, when younger, beside his father. Very rum, he thinks. Meanwhile, the only pub in the village is depressing and the food terrible. (The old landlady, however, turns out to be a splendid cook).

Then he calls on the local big house, Holly Hall, recently built by a nouveau riche peer after knocking down the old mansion. A corpse is found in the chimney, a corpse which nobody can, or will, identify. This is disturbing and baffling, but things soon get worse. An American married to the local doctor is found dead outside the church.

Grasby is baffled but keen to solve the mysterious deaths. Juggers appears with a smooth Whitehall type who gives Grasby puzzling instructio­ns.

From now on the plot thickens, and though your credulity will be more than strained, you are likely to push eagerly on even if you are as lost in the darkness for long periods as the unfortunat­e, resilient and agreeably comic Grasby.

It seems that there are to be further reminiscen­ces from Inspector Grasby, and on the evidence of this novel they will be welcome. Meyrick is a remarkably prolific writer and one with a large readership.

Some may be puzzled by this new departure but I doubt if they will be disappoint­ed. Grasby may be a clot but he is a likeable one who contrives to be both consciousl­y and unconsciou­sly amusing. The denouement here is absurd, but so what?

There are fine things a-plenty here, and there is the comfort of a crime novel which has a plot so far-fetched as to be not at all disturbing.

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