Review by Booklist Review
Rummage in the world of Sherlock Holmes, and you'll come across these authors' names: Arthur Morrison, E. W. Hornung, and Baroness Orczy. Most likely you haven't read them. They're here with 14 others, in this collection featuring the work of Conan Doyle's contemporaries. While Davis' collection offers the pleasure of undiscovered countries, it also reaffirms that the Master is still the Master. The earliest tales show a pace too slow and a syntax too elaborate for modern tastes. Like William Burton's 1837 ""The Secret Cell,"" which includes such overwrought phrases as ""in whose employ her husband had for some time been settled."" Things perk up as the twentieth century gets going, and the focus on reading a pattern in the physical world strengthens. Jacques Futrelle's detective spots the significance of a missing bandage in his 1906 tale, ""The Superfluous Finger."" Still, Doyle's magnetic personalities are missing, and this collection will likely be of mostly historical interest. Until the last item, Ernest Bramah's 1910 ""The Coin of Dionysius,"" starring the blind hero Max Carrados. His adventures occasionally outsold Holmes' and are worth looking up now.--Don Crinklaw Copyright 2019 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Davis (More Deadly Than the Male, editor) makes a welcome addition to early English detective fiction anthologies. Unlike scholars who date the birth of the genre to Poe's "The Murders in the Rue Morgue," Davis starts with an earlier short story, "The Secret Cell" by Poe's nemesis, William Evans Burton. That tale remains enjoyable today, with its dramatic account of the search for a missing 17-year-old servant, who stood to inherit a fortune from her employer. Other solid entries will also be new to many, such as an excerpt from the pseudonymous Charles Felix's The Notting Hill Mystery, an epistolary novel about a woman who supposedly drank a fatal dose of acid while sleepwalking. Davis's decision to excerpt novels doesn't always work: The Mystery of the Yellow Room by Phantom of the Opera creator Gaston Leroux doesn't deserve to be spoiled by a section from its denouement. Nonetheless, this quality compilation belongs on the shelf with such volumes as In the Shadow of Agatha Christie: Classic Crime Fiction by Forgotten Female Authors, 1850-1917. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Seventeen stories, originally published between 1837 and 1913, test the sweeping assertion by editor Davis (More Deadly Than the Male, 2019, etc.) that the period constituted "the mystery story's first golden age."The results are less than consistently convincing. The most successful detective in the earliest tale, Williams Evans Burton's windy, plodding "The Secret Cell," is the kidnapped heiress's dog. Scotland Yard's pursuit of horse thief Tally-Ho Thompson in Charles Dickens' "The Detective Police" is much more confidently presented but still forgettable. The excerpts from novels by Mary Elizabeth Braddon, Charles Felix, and Emile Gaboriau are nothing more than efficient ways of allowing fans to skip the books from which they're taken, and reprinting the climactic chapter from Gaston Leroux's The Mystery of the Yellow Room provides major spoilers for one of the seminal locked-room novels. Leslie Klinger's well-documented introductory essay notes that Arthur Conan Doyle himself acknowledged few forbears and that those he did note, Edgar Allan Poe (whose widely reprinted "The Mystery of Marie Rogt" makes still another appearance here) and Gaboriau, did not come off well. Doyle's gifts for economical exposition, epigrammatic dialogue, and solutions that were ingenious without seeming labored set him far above most of his rivals. Of the entrants here, top prizes go to the derelict police officer's dying confession of his most signal failure in Wilkie Collins' "Mr. Policeman and the Cook," the death of one sister and the disappearance of another solved by the determined Lady Molly of Scotland Yard in Baroness Orczy's "The Ninescore Mystery," The Thinking Machine's brisk investigation into the death of a woman soon after she demanded to have her finger cut off in Jacques Futrelle's "The Superfluous Finger," and the bright debuts in the careers of blandly efficient private investigator Martin Hewitt ("The Lenton Croft Robberies") and blind consulting detective Max Carrados ("The Coin of Dionysus").The audience most likely to enjoy the whole enterprise consists of those willing to overlook the claims that Holmes had any truly successful rivals and that his career coincided with a golden age. Bronze, maybe. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.