Mystery
Monday: A One Hit Wonder?
Over the years, there have been bands and soloists who
record a song that shoots them to the top of the charts. Millions of copies are
sold (or downloaded nowadays), but subsequent recordings of new material barely
make a showing. The singers faded into obscurity. Here are just a few: “Come on
Eileen” by Dexys Midnight Riders, “Take on Me” by A-ha, “Macarena” by Los Del
Rio, and “Tainted Love” by Soft Cell.
There are authors who suffer the same fate, sometimes
by fate, other times by choice. Alan Clutton-Brock is was born in 1904 in
Weybridge, Surrey, England. In 1955, he inherited Chastlelton House, which
turned out to be a financial burden. An artist, art critic, and professor at
Cambridge, Clutton-Brock didn’t have the income to maintain the building. In an
article in the Independent granddaughter
Sarah Jewel tells how he was” more concerned about his painting or reading to
keep the house tidy.”
Very involved in the art community, Clutton-Blake
wrote a biography of William Blake in 1933 and later became trustee of the
National Gallery. Widowed in 1936 after his wife died in a car accident, he
married Barbara Foy Mitchell the following year. Reports indicate he was friends
with T. S. Eliot and George Orwell. Is that why he wrote and published his one
and only novel, a mystery, Murder at
Liberty Hall?
Set in a co-educational school (considered VERY
progressive) shortly before the war began in the 1939, the book was hailed as a
“gleefully cerebral thriller” by New York
Times critic Kay Irvin. Popular with readers in the UK and the US, the book
sold well. The sleuth, scientist James Hardwicke, is an amateur and is at the
school to investigate a case of pyromania among the students. Within a short
time of his arrival, a murder occurs and it is up to Hardwicke to find the culprit.
Full of dry humor and political commentary, Murder at Liberty Hall isn’t fast paced
like today’s thrillers, but it will keep you turning pages.
Do you have a favorite one-hit-wonder author?
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