Mystery Monday: Who was Peter Drax?
There were
many famous people who lost their lives during WWII: Carole Lombard, Glenn
Miller, Leslie Howard, and Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Someone perhaps less well-known
who was killed in action was author Eric Elrington Addis. Writing under the
pseudonym Peter Drax, Addis published six crime novels during the Golden Age of
detective fiction.
Born in
Edinburgh, Scotland in 1899, Eric was the son of a retired Indian civil servant
and the daughter of an officer in the British Indian Army. He attended
Edinburgh University and then entered the Royal Navy. After serving with
distinction, he retired in 1929 and became a barrister focusing on admiralty
law and divorce. (A barrister is a lawyer who specializes in courtroom
litigation.) At the outbreak of WWII, he was called back in to service and was
assigned to HMS Warspite. Unfortunately he was killed in action during an air
raid on the British Navy base at Alexandria, Egypt.
Despite
his short career as a novelist, Eric is considered an important author during
the Golden Age. As one reviewer put it, “Rather than the artificial and outsize
master sleuths and super crooks found in so many classic mysteries from the
Gold Age, Drax’s novels concern police who are not endowed with supernatural powers
and crooks who are also human.” Two of his books, Death by Two Hands and Tune
to a Corpse were published in the United States, and received excellent
reviews. When he died he left an unfinished manuscript Sing a Song of Murder, and his wife, author Hazel Iris Wilson
completed the book, it was published in 1944.
Eric was a
voracious reader of thrilled, and felt most were “lamentably unlikely affairs,”
and set out to write mysteries that were “credible.” Critics and readers agree
that he met his goal, creating seven gripping stories, not for the faint of
heart. (An interesting aside, I searched for quite a while and never found a photograph of Eric.)
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