Autoren-Bilder

E. M. Channon (1875–1941)

Autor von The Honour of the House

28 Werke 192 Mitglieder 3 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Beinhaltet den Namen: Ethel Mary Channon

Reihen

Werke von E. M. Channon

The Honour of the House (1950) 31 Exemplare
Expelled from St. Madern's (1750) 19 Exemplare
Little G (1936) 16 Exemplare
The Cinderella Girl (1936) 15 Exemplare
Her Second Chance (2014) 15 Exemplare
The chimney murder (1929) 14 Exemplare
A Fifth-Form Martyr (2015) 14 Exemplare
Twice Dead (1930) 13 Exemplare
The Handsome Hardcastles (2017) 8 Exemplare
A Countess at School (2016) 6 Exemplare
The Gilt-Edged Mystery (2015) 6 Exemplare
The Honour of a Guide (1931) 5 Exemplare
That Awful Term (1935) 5 Exemplare
The Perfect Miss Coverdale (1925) 4 Exemplare

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Gebräuchlichste Namensform
Channon, E. M.
Andere Namen
Ethel Mary Bredin
Geburtstag
1875-10-17
Todestag
1941-06-06
Geschlecht
female
Nationalität
UK
Geburtsort
Ireland
Ausbildung
St Leonard's Ladies' College
Berufe
girls' school story author
detective story writer

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Originally published in 1932, The Gilt Edged Mystery by E. M. Channon is a clever mystery that follows two story lines and two murders that eventually mesh together in a cleverly contrived and slightly melodramatic manner. The settings vary from Geneva, Switzerland to the Peak District as a Cambridge mathematics scholar gets involved in both plot lines.

Alured Dalmaine meets and falls in love with a school mistress in Geneva and agrees to check on her sister, who married an Englishman and now lives in the Peak District. The sister hasn’t been heard from in a while and there is concern that she may be unhappy or in some kind of trouble. He also becomes involved with a fellow traveller, Samuel Hooper, who has inherited a fortune, which did not sit well with his many cousins who were left out of the will. When Alured discovers Hooper with a slit throat, there is no shortage of suspects.

This was lively mystery that offered up plenty of red herrings along with some very strange character names and while the ending was a little over the top, I enjoyed my read of this golden age mystery.
… (mehr)
½
 
Gekennzeichnet
DeltaQueen50 | Jan 29, 2021 |
Golly, gosh and goodness me! What under the canopy is going on at St M's? Well - it's about 18 months since I read this book and my head still reels a bit (in a good way) when I think about it, so I find it hard to describe.

Suffice to say, there are some very odd things happening at the eponymous school and, after - for me - a rather slow and seemingly predictable (ha!) start to the book, I could barely put it down.

As a girls' school story fan, I'd seen a lot of recommendations for E M Channon's works and warmly agree that she wrote some notable contributions to the genre. If you haven't met her writing, do check her out.… (mehr)
½
2 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
patchygirl | Oct 7, 2016 |
THE CHIMNEY MURDER is on the face of it one of those restrained domestic stories that English mystery writing of the era is so well-known for but underneath its polite veneer the book borders on revolutionary.

It centres on two households living side-by-side in the type of outer London suburb/village that seems to populate a certain kind of novel. The Binn family is dominated by J Harbottle Binn (only his feckless brother ever calls him by his hated first name of Jabez). He is an angry, bullying, occasionally violent man whose long-suffering wife Selina and adult children Cynthia and Adrian are normally at pains to ensure that everything is to his liking so as to avoid as much of his wrath as they can. But in an act of family treason Cynthia and Adrian arrange a day-long birthday treat for their mother in which the three of them, along with their neighbour Marian Marley and her son Stephen, are to head to Windsor for sightseeing and picnicking. This adventure is to be undertaken entirely without their father’s knowledge, even after the event, as one of his many draconian rules is that their house must never be left unattended. A wonderful time is in fact enjoyed by all – especially Cynthia and Stephen who find a few moments to declare their love for each other. The next day Adrian determines to light a fire in the drawing room – even though it is only September and their father will be angry at such profligacy – but struggles with the task, producing more smoke than warmth. It soon transpires that a human arm wrapped in newspaper has been stuffed into the Binn’s chimney. And so begins the family’s descent into public infamy and personal chaos.

Although I was never in much doubt regarding who the arm (and other body parts subsequently located) belonged to nor even who had put them there, I still found THE CHIMNEY MURDER very engaging as there are plenty of other mysteries to uncover and I was caught up in seeing how the various players responded to the succession of alarming events that disrupt their lives. But even though it is solidly entertaining the story is not this book’s real strength. That lies in its rather marvellous characters who evolve very intelligently which is not something I’d necessarily expect from a decades-old whodunit. The stars are its two apparently downtrodden wives who turn out to be much stronger than anyone (even themselves?) would have thought possible.

Selina Binn has been bullied and verbally abused by her husband for years and initially presents as you might surmise based on that. She even lets her children cajole her into the birthday outing which she knows she ought not to participate in because she is so used to doing what others tell her. But when things turn sour – it’s not much of a spoiler to say that Harbottle Binn becomes a suspect in what the newspapers call the chimney murder – Selina comes into her own. Not only does she show us that her marriage has more to it than just ‘the bully and the doormat’ element, reminding us that we should never rush to judgement based on what we think we know about other people’s lives, but she demonstrates real strength of character and ultimately turns the tables – ever so politely – on her husband. Honestly I felt like standing up and cheering at a couple of points. Marian Marley is tested in different ways – living in penury for most of her life before learning a horrendous secret about her husband that has lasting consequences for her own future – but she too refuses to let this grind her down.

I’m often found lamenting the depiction of female characters in my classic crime reading so it was an utter delight to discover such well-rounded and feisty women in a book that’s not far off a hundred years old. The men are not left out of the character development stakes though as Adrian too is shown learning to stand up to his bully of a father. Mr Binn meanwhile undergoes the opposite kind of metamorphosis and that too is sensitively depicted.

There are plenty of things which remind the reader that the events being depicted in THE CHIMNEY MURDER are taking place in 1929, not least of which are the social attitudes on display, but the book never feels dated. Indeed at times it seems to have a thoroughly modern sensibility. Partly this is due to the presence of my two newest literary heroines (and Cynthia too who is no slouch in the standing up for herself stakes) but there are other elements including an undercurrent of really clever humour. For example there’s a minor thread involving the Binn’s other next door neighbour who is a malicious gossip but the police inspector working on the case puts her in her place very smartly in a scene guaranteed to bring a smile to the face of anyone who’s ever encountered such a gossip.

In short I completely adored my first foray into the output of the Greyladies publishing house and can thoroughly recommend THE CHIMNEY MURDER to those who enjoy a classic crime novel with heart and humour and some truly memorable characters.
… (mehr)
1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
bsquaredinoz | Jun 20, 2016 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
28
Mitglieder
192
Beliebtheit
#113,797
Bewertung
½ 3.7
Rezensionen
3
ISBNs
15

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