Showing posts with label #HYH25. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #HYH25. Show all posts

Friday, February 13, 2026

The Plumley Inheritance


 The Plumley Inheritance (1926) by Christopher Bush

Major Geoffrey Wrentham has just arrived back in England after wrapping things up abroad after the end of the Great War. He's at loose ends and think he'll look up his old friend Ludovic Travers after checking in with his financial advisors. He learns two things from the financial wallahs--that Henry Plumley, the business magnate with whom Wrentham had invested money, had gone a bit mad while Wrentham was out of England and the finances are not all that they should be and that Travers has been serving as one of Plumley's secretaries (after Travers was invalided out of the war). Wrentham learns that Plumley is going to give a speech that very night and figures that Travers will be on deck for the event, so the major decides to kill two birds with one stone and try to see both men at the event.

He doesn't see Travers and he doesn't get a chance to talk to Plumley because the man drops dead in the middle of his speech. And a very odd speech it was. One of Plumley's other secretaries hands the man a note and suddenly the businessman starts spouting off about treasure and lillies and gardens. When Wrentham finally runs Travers to earth, he finds that Plumley had his secretary on a scavenger hunt shortly before he died--finding particular bits of wire, pine cones, used suitcases, waterproof cement,methods for making glass opaque, and other odd things. 

Plumley had more than one residence and one of them just happens to be in the village where Wrentham grew up. Travers has to stay in London to wrap up Plumley's affairs, so the major heads home to stay with his father and to scout around. He discovers that Plumley did some rather odd things in the garden the last time he was at his country house--ordering the replanting of the garden border and redesigning an old well among them. Just as Wrentham has been writing clues down like mad and tidying up his notes to share with Travers, someone steals his notes, sets a booby trap (that gives the major one of several knocks on the head), and Plumley's other secretary, Andre Moulines, is found dead from wounds very similar to Wrentham's. Next thing we know, someone has been digging up the gardens at both of Plumley's residences...someone else is in search of buried treasure. Will Wrentham and Travers figure out the hidden message in Plumley's last speech before their unknown rival? Will Burrows, the local policeman, arrest one of them for Moulines murder--or if not that, then for impeding an officer in the pursuit of his duties? And, in the midst of all the treasure-hunting, will anyone figure out who killed the secretary? 

So...what we have here is the very first of the Ludovic Travers mysteries by Christopher Bush. Except...our protagonist is Geoffrey Wrentham. The man who does nearly all the on-page legwork and brainwork is (you guessed it) Geoffrey Wrentham. Ludo (as he's known to his friends) comes across as a bright side-kick to the hero. I somehow don't think that the most auspicious beginning for a series sleuth. But then maybe Bush didn't plan on a series. Or maybe he started out thinking that Wrentham was going to be his main man. I don't know--but other than figuring out the last bit of the treasure hunt puzzle (with a clue that unless I missed it Bush didn't even give to us), Travers really doesn't do much of the detective work here. Wrentham isn't the best detective in the world (our culprit gets the best of him repeatedly), but he does decipher about 90% of the treasure puzzle. Nobody really figures out the murder--we get a convenient confession letter left mailed to Wrentham after the bird has flown. 

On the other hand, I really enjoyed Wrentham and his boys own adventure antics. It's a shame that Bush didn't make him just a little more perceptive and a little less prone to getting bashed on the head. He could have made a very appealing lead detective. Fortunately (from previous experience), I know that Bush polishes up Travers and makes him into a better detective than his first appearance would leave us to believe possible. This one is an enjoyable read even though the tale leaves a bit to be desired. ★★

First line: Geoffrey Wrentham yawned sleepily and stretched his long legs, then, eyes opening to the sun of a July evening, started up quickly.

The reception of money was to him [the vicar] much of a mystery. That he generally found somethin in the bank when he was there was enough for him. (p. 40)

People talked about the army and its stereotyped phraseology, but that was plain as the way to the parish church compared with the sort of drivel those lawyer blokes could produce when they really got going. (p. 53)

A more unlikely conspirator than Ludovic Travers could hardly be imagined. He did not possess that keenness of manner and that incisiveness of speech which would appear to be the distinguishing marks 

of the human bloodhound. (p. 67)

The thing was that you never knew just what he [Travers] was capable of doing or when he was going to do it. Such was Wrentham's faith in him that he would have consulted him on anything, form toothache to tattooing, and have been sure of an answer. (p. 68)

Last line: "By Jove!" exclaimed Wrentham; "there goes one more bloke who'll remember the Plumley inheritance!"
**********************

Deaths = 5 (one poisoned; one natural; one fell from height; one hit on head; one in the war)

Saturday, February 7, 2026

100 Years Hence Challenge: 1926

 


Neeru at A Hot Cup of Pleasure has been a regular participant in various reading challenges here at the Block--and has been well and truly bitten by the challenge-hosting bug as well. Here is the second year of the 100 Years Hence Reading Challenge. The basic rule is simple: Read at least one book from 1926. Any text in any format counts. And there is a prize for the person who reads the most books from a 100 years hence. Read all about it at the link above.

Here are some possibilities from my teetering stacks of TBRs:

The Mouls House Mystery by Charles Barry
The Plumley Inheritance by Christopher Bush (2/13/26)
The Cheyne Mystery by Freeman Wills Crofts
Poppy Ott & the Stuttering Parrot by Leo Edwards
The Massingham Butterfly & Other Stories by J. S. Fletcher
Madame Storey: Private Investigator by Hulbert Footner
The Creeping Siamese by Dashiell Hammett
These Old Shades by Georgette Heyer
Harvey Garrard's Crime by E. Phillips Oppenheim
Enough Rope by Dorothy Parker
Ann's Crime by R. T. M. Scott
The Day of Uniting by Edgar Wallace
The Door With Seven Locks by Edgar Wallace
The Girl from Scotland Yard by Edgar Wallace


And if I want to do a reread in 2026:

The Chinese Parrot by Earl Derr Biggers
The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie (3/24/26)
Death at Swaythling Court by J. J. Connington
Winnie the Pooh by A. A. Milne
The Tattooed Man by Howard Pease
The Bat by Mary Roberts Rinehart
Clouds of Witness by Dorothy L. Sayers
The Benson Murder Case by S. S. Van Dine
The Corbin Necklace by Henry Kitchell Webster


And the only book I have previously read from 1926 that I will not, under any circumstances, be revisiting:

The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway


Thursday, December 25, 2025

John Macnab


 John Macnab (1925) by John Buchan

The great lawyer/politician Sir Edward Leithen is feeling a bit under the weather, so he goes to see his friend and doctor who gives him the worst news possible. There's nothing wrong with him--at least not physically. But if that's the case, then what's a man filled with ennui and who doesn't feel like doing anything to do? His friend jokingly suggests doing something a bit dangerous and slightly illegal...something that will get the old adrenaline pumping. Of course, that would be an absurd thing for such an eminent man to do...

Then Leithen goes to his club where he finds two of his friends, the banker John Palliser-Yeates and Charles Lamancha, a nobleman and fellow politician, in the same boat. They've all lost the zest of life. None of them feel like doing any of the things they're supposed to do. And then...a fourth friend, Sir Archie Roylance--war hero and rising aspiring politician--comes along and tells them about the legend of Jim Tarras, a man who was bored in the Scottish Highlands and sent anonymous notes to local landowners warning them that he planned to poach on their land on certain days. The thrill of doing what he wasn't supposed to do and trying to evade the gamekeepers provided him with enough excitement to knock him out of his ennui.

The men are thrilled with the idea and talk Rolance into inviting him to his Scottish estate where they will play the same game with some of his neighbors. They decide to send the challenges out under the nom de plume John Macnab. The rest of the book revolves around the antics of the men as they scope out the land and the response of the local landowners to their challenge.

John Macnab strikes me as a cross between Jerome K. Jerome (of Three Men in a Boat fame) and pretty much any P. G. Wodehouse book. We have three bored gentlemen doing a fair amount of fairly ridiculous things to achieve their ends. And on the other side we have equally determined landowners hiring navvies and going to other great lengths to prevent them  It's fun to watch. And along the way Buchan gives us the most amazing character sketches and charming interplay between the various characters. The characterization is the best part of this one. 

My previous experience with Buchan is The 39 Steps. And this definitely is not that. It's far more farce than adventure...and there's even less mystery. The biggest mystery is whether the men will be caught or not and, if so, how. But it is a lot of fun and a nice, comfortable read. ★★

First line: The great doctor stood on the hearth-rug looking down at his friend who sprawled before him in an easy-chair.

Last line: Below four signatures were engraved--Lamancha, Edward Leithen and John-Palliser-Yeates, and last, in a hand of surprising boldness, the honoured name of Benjamin Bogle.

***************
Deaths = two natural

*Finished on 12/22/25

Saturday, December 14, 2024

100 Years Hence Reading Challenge

 


Neeru at A Hot Cup of Pleasure has been a regular participant in various reading challenges here at the Block--and has now been bitten by the challenge-hosting bug as well. The 100 Years Hence Reading Challenge is simple: Read at least one book from 1925. Any text in any format counts. And there is a prize for the person who reads the most books from a 100 years hence. Read all about it at the link above.

Here are some possibilities from my teetering stacks of TBRs:

The Under Dogs by Hulbert Footner
The Charteris Mystery by A. E. Fielding
The House Without a Key by Earl Derr Biggers
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes by Anita Loos
John McNab by John Buchan (12/22/25)

And if I want to do a reread in 2025:

The Murder Book of J. G. Reader by Edgar Wallace
The Red Lamp by Mary Roberts Rinehart
Death of a Millionaire by G.D.H. & Margaret Cole
The Painted Veil by Somerset Maugham
The Secret of Chimneys by Agatha Christie
The Professor's House by Willa Cather
Ariel Custer by Grace Livingston Hill

Books I have previously read from 1925 that I will not, under any circumstances, be revisiting (previous review linked):

Heart of a Dog by Mikhail Bulgakov
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald [not one of my most popular reviews :-) ]