Posted in Book Review, Books I have read, Five Star Reads, The Classic Club

The Moving Toyshop – Edmund Crispin

Classic
5*s

Written in 1946 this is actually the third in the author’s series featuring the Oxford Professor of English Language and Literature Gervase Fen, but the first one that I have read and this one is featured in Martin Edwards’ brilliant book The Story of Classic Crime in 100 Books.

In this book we meet famous poet Richard Cadogan who is seeking inspiration and so taps up his publisher for some money. That gets him just enough for a short holiday to Oxford. Clearly not very good on the organisational front after some hitch-hiking he finds himself on the deserted high street late at night and enters a toy shop, as you do, and finds a body of an elderly woman, clearly murdered. Poor old Richard is knocked out and locked in a cupboard by an unknown assailant. So it isn’t until the morning that he can alert anyone, by which time when he leads the finest of Oxfordshire’s constabulary to the high street, the toyshop has vanished.

Ultimately this is a locked room puzzle that needs a mind of a particular type to unlock the mystery and of course the local police aren’t terribly interested there being no body, no toyshop and therefore one has to assume no crime. Richard Cadogan isn’t to be thwarted though, he knows what he saw and so he calls on his old friend Gervase Fen to help. Gervase hops into his temperamental and somewhat erratically driven car, Lily Christine to investigate.

The unravelling of the mystery involves a legacy, one of the most often used device of the time but no less compelling for that, a sprinkling of limericks and a suitably complicated execution of a crime – fictional criminals of this era seemingly wanting to make things as difficult for themselves as those who may wind up investigating it.
Of course our duo don’t hand their suspicions over to the police, after all a poet and a university professor are quite entitled to work things out for themselves, even roping others into helping out

“I don’t think this is going to work,” Mr. Beavis remarked with some apprehension.
“It will work,” Fen responded confidently, “because no one expects this sort of trick outside a book”

The wonder of this novel is not so much the mystery, although that was well-executed, but the brilliant double-act that are Fen and Cadogan. While they are racing around in cars or sitting in bars stalking out various characters, they play silly games to pass the time such as unintentionally loathsome characters in literature, horrible classics and the most unreadable books of all time. All great fun although I have to admit that the use of unfamiliar phrases and words meant I am fully aware I didn’t quite get every humorous message, but I got enough to keep me fully entertained. Being set in Oxford even the local policeman is interested in literature..

Gervase, has it ever occurred to you that Measure for Measure is about the problem of Power?”
Don’t bother me with trivialities now” said Fen, annoyed, and rang off.

And even the lorry driver that gave Richard a lift at the start of the book reads from the circulating library citing “lady’s somebody’s lover” as an example of a recent read.

Most of all this book is fun with a capital F. I’ll be honest I wasn’t sure quite what to expect but I fell in love with the characters, the bizarreness and the rattling pace which was enhanced by the humour.

The Moving Toyshop is number 39 on The Classics Club list and the third of my fifty choices that I’ve read and reviewed. A great introduction into my Classic Crime Fiction.

 

First Published UK: 1946
Publisher: Penguin 
No of Pages: 245
Genre: Classic Fiction
Amazon UK
Amazon US

Author:

A book lover who clearly has issues as obsessed with crime despite leading a respectable life

29 thoughts on “The Moving Toyshop – Edmund Crispin

  1. I think I’m going to revise my Classics Club list as I want to include more Classic Crime Fiction. It hadn’t thought of it when I first compiled my list but recently I’ve been adding Golden Age crime fiction to my TBR list, so they should also be in the CC list – including The Moving Toyshop. I like books that refer to other books as well.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I love the sound of this book. I can see that I not only need to explore the author, but I also really, really need to read Martin Edwards’ book about classic crime. And books about books that mention books…fun deluxe!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I absolutely recommend Martin Edwards book, it really did give me some pointers of where to start my exploration and this one was a real winner that I probably wouldn’t have found otherwise.

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  3. So glad you enjoyed this one Cleo! Some say it’s actually Crispin’s best. I don’t know if that’s true, but it’s really quite well done, isn’t it? And I do like the wit in Crispin’s novels. You’re right, too, of course: it’s a classic ‘impossible’ sort of mystery.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. These characters sounds fantastic! I really want to read more about these silly games that they play to pass the time (really I just want to know who they would chose for the unintentionally loathsome characters in literature! Lol!)

    Liked by 1 person

  5. I think I read this as an undergrad and it gave me rather an unrealistic notion of what it would be like as a professor of English – American unis are not so tolerant of eccentricity. I gather Montgomery (was that his real name) had a bit of a drinking problem himself. The stories were delightful tho.

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