A scene from Headhunters (2011), based on Jo Nesbo's novel |
Authors of a substantial corpus of popular police procedurals or featuring a homicide detective must relish the opportunity to leave the dictates of the genre and experiment with freestanding fiction. The internationally best-selling Norwegian crime writer, Jo Nesbo, who has churned out nine Harry Hole (pronounced Hurler) thrillers, has drawn upon some of his familiar trademarks – gruesome scenes, black humour, fast pacing and intricate plotting – to produce a pared down caper story Headhunters (2008, translated into English 2011, Vintage Canada). The British Canadian writer, Peter Robinson, best known for his successful nineteen novels about Chief Inspector Alan Banks of the Yorkshire police force, has recently released his third standalone, Before the Poison (McClelland & Stewart, 2011), a worthy winner of the 2013 Pilys Award for best mystery. Despite the vast differences in structure, style and narrative, what is similar about these novels is the function that ghosts play in propelling the narrative.
One of the other
pleasures of the novel is Nesbo’s tongue-in-cheek attitude toward police
procedurals. Technically, the Harry Hole novels cannot be classified as such
because Harry, although a brilliant cop, is an embarrassment to the Oslo police force: an
alcoholic who is mostly despised by colleagues and his superiors. For the most
part, they are an unprincipled lot and would jettison Harry if they could. In Headhunters Brede Speere is highly
respected investigator courted by the media. In over twelve pages, Speere is
questioned about the murder spree and its supposed resolution. Although some of
the details are accurate, his overall analysis is deeply flawed. Nesbo must
have enjoyed writing these pages and the reader is left wondering how
frequently this scenario reflects real life. The film briefly shows the
interview but I think the satire is lost.
Peter Robinson’s Before the Poison is a vastly different
book with its leisurely pace, quiet almost elegiac tone and more complex
structure. In 2011, a wealthy retiree, Chris Lowndes, leaves a lucrative living
writing film scores in Hollywood by returning to his roots in Yorkshire and
purchasing an old secluded home so that he can come to terms with his grief
over the death of his wife, Laura, from cancer and reignite an old passion by
writing a Schubertian piano sonata. Once he learns that his home was the site
of a murder that occurred sixty years ago, the victim being the eminent Doctor
Ernest Fox, and that his wife, Grace, was hanged for poisoning him, he becomes
increasingly interested, even obsessed in proving her innocence – for reasons
that become understandable over the course of the novel. Robinson evokes the
spooky atmosphere of a Daphne Du Maurier novel when Chris is alone at night
with its creaking floors and howling winds. Given that a painting of Grace is
on the wall, it is perhaps not too surprising that on one occasion, he sees
what he believes is her image in a mirror or was it a “trick of the moonlight?”
In his dreams and reveries, he sees Grace who becomes interchangeable with
Laura. He feels Grace’s presence in the house and memories of Laura,
particularly her last days, haunt him. If some readers do not accept that the ghost of Roger Brown’s father is
an important character in Headhunters,
no one will contest that the spirit of Grace Fox and to a lesser extent that of
Laura Lowndes permeate Before the Poison.
Chris’s first person
account of his need to track down people who knew her by travelling to London,
Paris and even South Africa is interspersed with passages from a contemporary
account of the trial in Famous Trials
and Grace Fox’s wartime journal. They offer different perspectives and styles
that enable the reader to understand more fully what took place the night of
Fox’s death as well as provide startling insights into the war, both at home
and abroad, and illuminate the sexist attitudes of the times. The difference
between the
contemporary account of the trial and Grace’s wartime journal is stark.
Ostensibly, the former is an objective account of the crime and trial but Famous Trials’ version is in reality moralistic and
judgemental in tune with the biases and prejudices of a judge and all male jury
in rural 1953 England.
Clearly, Grace was convicted on purloined evidence, which was at best
circumstantial and at its worse based on testimony that was full of lies and
innuendo. The real reason for her conviction was that she had an affair with a
younger man, whom Chris tracks down in Paris, an elderly painter who never got
over the grief of losing her. By contrast, Grace’s journal reveals a wartime
nurse who displayed extraordinary courage and resilience in the wake of immense
suffering, including the loss of personal friends, during her time in the Far East and in the European war zones. The ghostly
revenant that haunted Chris has now been replaced by a vital, compassionate
woman. Yet in keeping with the spirit of the time, her prose describing the
horror is restrained and she minimizes her own role even though she was awarded
a Royal Red Cross, the highest honour a military nurse can earn, a fact that of
course never surfaced at her trial. Perhaps that is not surprising given that
she was told at the end of the war that she should return to being a young lady
and never talk about her experiences to friends and loved ones lest she be
regarded as a pariah. No wonder that the
author of Famous Trials noted her
“grim silences,” “dark moods” and “unpredictable outbursts” without having a
clue about her wartime trauma.
Through his own
research and painstaking interviews, Chris is able to unearth evidence of Dr.
Fox’s secret wartime activities. He has already learned from elderly locals
that Fox was an arrogant, cold physician and indifferent to the suffering of
his patients, and that he had little regard for his younger wife after she
presented him with an heir. Chris’s discoveries, which cannot be revealed here,
are disturbing but not surprising given Fox’s character. That his wife found
out about his activities, and given that she had seen evidence of Nazi
atrocities in Normandy,
might offer a motive for murder that contemporaries did not remotely consider
since they were fixated on her adultery and her alleged desire to kill him for
his money. But Grace’s character gleaned from her journal challenges that
theory. How Robinson resolves these conundrums and their relationship to
Laura’s death, is in my estimation most satisfying. Perhaps his most incisive
insight is how rarely individuals can step outside the realities of their own
time because they are immersed in its prejudices and
preconceptions.
– Bob Douglas is a teacher and author. His second volume to That Line of Darkness: The Shadow of Dracula and the Great War (Encompass Editions, 2011), titled That Line of Darkness: Vol. II The Gothic from Lenin to bin Laden, is available now. For more information, please visit www.thatlineofdarkness.com.
(photo by Keith Penner) |
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