Posted on 01/07/2011 2:18:26 PM PST by nickcarraway
Every detective tale needs a red herring, and I had mine: What if I pursued the author of Velvet Lawn instead? I found that just one other work, an earlier and unpublished one, shared the same title. It was written by . . . Benjamin Disraeli.
The novelist and prime minister was an intriguing suspect: authors are loath to leave good titles unused, and Saunders, Otley published some of Disraelis books. His political career also gave him good reason for a pseudonym. Yet the mysterys style didnt match his, and its unmentioned in his copious correspondence. I had a motive, but no smoking gun or fingerprints: Disraeli wasnt my man.
Id almost given up when I stumbled upon a Literary Gossip column in The Manchester Times for May 14, 1864. The sole identification of Charles Felix had lain there for 146 years, hidden in this single sentence: It is understood that Velvet Lawn, by Charles Felix, the new novel announced by Messrs. Saunders, Otley & Co., is by Mr. Charles Warren Adams, now the sole representative of that firm.
The author was hiding in plain sight: There was no publisher correspondence with Charles Felix because he didnt need to write to himself.
A traveler and journalist once best known for a fractious elopement with a relative of Samuel Coleridge, the publisher Charles Warren Adams (18331903) bears other hints of his authorship. Theres his law school training, which underlies the novels evidentiary process, and a previous book on parlor games The London Reviews puzzle comparison struck closer than its reviewer realized.
Adams was also notably religious, which points to an unexpected characteristic of the first detective novel: its profoundly moral. It asks not just how evil exists, but what is to be done about it. Detective novels, like sermons,
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
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I’m pretty sure I didn’t, but I am open minded on the issue...
One of those merry mixups with a time machine. :’)
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