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Margot Bennett (1912–1980)

Autor von The Man Who Didn't Fly

14+ Werke 210 Mitglieder 13 Rezensionen

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Beinhaltet die Namen: Margot Bennet, Margot Bennet

Reihen

Werke von Margot Bennett

Zugehörige Werke

Alfred Hitchcock Presents: Stories Not for the Nervous (1966) — Mitwirkender — 300 Exemplare
The Edinburgh Mystery: And Other Tales of Scottish Crime (2022) — Mitwirkender — 65 Exemplare
Murder Mixture: An Anthology of Crime Stories (1963) — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar
Choice of Weapons (1958) — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar

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Wissenswertes

Gebräuchlichste Namensform
Bennett, Margot
Andere Namen
Miller, Margot
Mitchell, Margot
Geburtstag
1912-01-19
Todestag
1980-12-06
Geschlecht
female
Nationalität
UK
Geburtsort
Lenzie, Dunbartonshire, Scotland, UK
Sterbeort
London, England, UK
Wohnorte
London, England, UK
Berufe
crime writer
screenwriter
thriller writer
science fiction writer
journalist
humanitarian aid worker
Kurzbiographie
Margot Bennett, née Mitchell or Miller, was born in Lenzie, Dunbartonshire, Scotland. She was educated in Scotland and Australia, and worked as an advertising copywriter in Sydney and London. During the Spanish Civil War, she worked as a nurse, translator, and broadcaster for the Spanish Medical Aid Committee assisting the Republicans in the fight against fascism. During the war, she broke her arm when a truck overturned, and she was shot in both ankles.

In 1938, she married Richard Lawrence Bennett, an English journalist and writer who had served in the Spanish Republican Army since 1936 and written broadcasts for Radio Catalan. They had four children together. Back in the UK, Bennett became a regular writer for Lilliput magazine from 1943 to 1950. However, she is best remembered for her crime fiction, thrillers, and science fiction published from the 1940s to the 1960s, including The Long Way Back (1955) and The Man Who Didn't Fly (1955).

Her detective novel Someone from the Past (1958) won the Gold Dagger Award from the Crime Writers' Association. Bennett also wrote some scripts for television, including episodes for the series Maigret, Emergency-Ward 10, Market in Honey Lane, and Quick Before They Catch Us. She wrote the screenplays for two films adapted from her books, The Man Who Liked Funerals (1959) and The Crowning Touch (1959).


Bennett was a supporter of left-wing causes, including the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, and wrote The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Atomic Radiation (1964).

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

I'm going to spoil the ending of this one to some degree. I'll try to say some general things first, so you can tell whether you care about the spoiling.

This is another novel reissued as a British Library Crime Classic—just this past year, 2023. Margot Bennett was the first woman to win the Gold Dagger (though there was at least one woman on the shortlist every previous year). She never wrote another crime novel after this one, mostly turning instead to writing for television. Did she quit on a high?

In some ways, yes. The book is a fairly successful marriage of the classic form of the whodunnit with some then-contemporary psychological content. As in the previous winner, the psychologies of the main characters are foregrounded and examined as putative explanations for their actions—murder is more than base motive. But, unlike with the previous winner, there is a genuine, well-executed mystery at the core of the novel: which among four suspects, all complete shits of varying consistency, murdered the protagonist's friend?

The protagonist is a youngish woman, Nancy, who is a writer for magazines. Her dead friend is Sarah. The four suspects are all terrible, terrible men with whom Nancy, Sarah, or both have romantic pasts or presents. I say "romantic". This feels like a euphemism here, since none of the relationships described are obviously loving, in the sense we should hope to use that word.

The book works, insofar as it does, because the four male suspects are all convincingly bad. One of them is actively trying to frame Nancy for Sarah's death, and going some way to succeeding. She doesn't know which of them it is, and the police are on to her (not without reason—she doesn't always help herself). Meanwhile, all four terrible men take turns at being personally horrible to Nancy, each in their own entirely believable way. So we believe that any of them could be capable of the crime, and we don't know which it is until the last few pages. This engaging, well-wrought plot is written up tightly enough to create tension, with adept use of flashback to fill in the characters. It's all helped along by snappy, funny dialogue; the introduction by Martin Edwards speculates that Bennett identified with Nancy, and she certainly gets all the very best lines.

There are two reasons why I'm not entirely sold on this book. The first is that it is so appallingly, irredeemably squalid. Perhaps this is exactly as it was for young women writers in the 1950s, but oh dear, the grime and the stink and the horrible, horrible men make you itch as you read. And this brings me to the second reason, and the spoiler. After the mystery is solved, after all is settled, after we know which of the shits is a murderer, after we and Nancy know they are all shits: after all that, she falls swooning into the arms of the worst of the shits, the one who has treated her most appallingly, whose only positive quality appears to be his innocence of murder.

Now, there is a question of how seriously this ending should be taken. It's possible that Bennett meant it as a sort of tragic coda—that she sees the obvious problems with the proposition, and sees Nancy as deserving of them, as no better than she ought to be. But I don't think this is so. I think this is meant to be a consummate, cheering resolution. To modern sensibilities, it is certainly not cheering, and really not believable—in fact, close to incomprehensible. It mars what is otherwise a very fine book, worth reading for its plot, its dialogue, and its itchy squalor.
… (mehr)
½
 
Gekennzeichnet
hypostasise | Feb 11, 2024 |
Roger Maple has gone missing! Maple, claims to be a freelance “financier” but is more of a borrower than a lender. His friend Duncan Stewart is out to find him. One problem is Stewart is a film producer and not a detective.

It seems Maple had tapped a number of people for money as an “investment” just before he left. One of his props is his acquaintance with the King of Ardania, actually the ex-king.

Seems this king has some big plans for his homeland, but just needs a little financial help. This king avoids any and all public appearances. He plays the part of a recluse. A strange behaviour for someone of such a high profile.

Duncan Stewart’s search to find Maple, dead or alive, takes a pathway involving murder, intrigue, subterfuges and a bit of romance. There are also some interesting works of art in high demand, but they are not for sale.

More of a novel than a traditional mystery. An interesting read!
… (mehr)
 
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ChazziFrazz | Feb 19, 2023 |
Meh. I didn’t guess the culprit and it was revealed essentially on the last page, which I felt was a bit of a cop-out. Also too many characters; it got confusing.
 
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rabbitprincess | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 11, 2023 |
Experimental detective story which is rather disjointed. You need to do the detection but not many clues. Characters seem interchangeable unlikeable and ultimately unengaging. Not got to the end but can't see it getting any better.
 
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wrichard | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 4, 2023 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
14
Auch von
4
Mitglieder
210
Beliebtheit
#105,678
Bewertung
½ 3.4
Rezensionen
13
ISBNs
25
Sprachen
1

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