Mystery Monday: Wilkie Collins
Last month I wrote a blog post about W. Somerset Maugham and his book Ashenden, or The
British Agent which was touted as the first spy novel written by someone
who served in that capacity. A follower pointed out that Wilkie Collins and his
book The Moonstone was the first detective
novel since it was published in 1868. I had never heard of Collins, and many of
you may not have either, so without further ado, here’s a bit about the man and
his novel…
Williams Wilkie Collins, named for his father, painter
William Collins, and godfather, Sir David Wilkie, was born in the Marylebone
district of London on January 8, 1824. He and his family lived in Italy and
France for two years, then he returned to England to attend boarding school.
After leaving school in 1841, he worked for a tea merchant, but disliked the
job immensely. He began to write stories and in 1850, after his father died, he
published his first, The Memoirs of the
Life of William Collins, Esq., R.A. It received good reviews, so he
continued to write, ultimately publishing thirty books, over one hundred
articles, a dozen plays, and numerous short stories.
By all reports, Collins lived against the social mores
of the time. Rather than adhere to the strict Victorian code, he ate and drank
to excess, wore flamboyant clothing, and formed long-term relationships with
two women he didn’t marry, one of whom bore him three children. He also
suffered from ill-health and took opium as a result, which he ultimately became
addicted to.
The
Moonstone was not well-received by critics or Collins’s mentor
and friend, Charles Dickens, but according to T.S. Eliot, “the first, the
longest, and the best of modern English detective novels…in a genre invented by
Collins, not by Poe.” Dorothy Sayers commented that it was “probably the very
finest detective novel ever written.”
Containing many thriller elements, the plot of The Moonstone revolves around the theft
of a large diamond inherited by a young woman on her eighteenth birthday.
Incorporating some of the elements of the origins of the Hope Diamond, the
story is told in a series of narratives (similar to Maugham’s Ashenden. The complex plot involves many
twists and turns and includes many of the fundamentals now part of many
mysteries: red herrings, a celebrated, skilled investigator, a bumbling local
police force, lots of false suspects, and the “least likely suspect.”
Over the years, The
Moonstone has found its way into radio, film, and television adaptations,
the most recent one in 2016 by the BBC. Check your public library, they are
sure to have a copy of this classic.
I love those "vintage" books! I listened to "The Moonstone" on Librivox.com years ago. I should find it and listen again. :D Thanks for sharing those biographical details!
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed the post, and thanks for stopping by. I love the "vintage" writers too - Hammett, Chandler, Greene, etc.
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