The
Secret Identity of Roger Scarlett
It was not unusual for female authors to use male
pseudonyms during the Golden Age of Detective Fiction – think Anthony Gilbert
or Ngaio Marsh – but Roger Scarlett is actually the nom de plume of two women
who met while working at the publisher Houghton Mifflin in Boston. Graduates of
Bryn Mawr and Vassar respectively, Evelyn Page and Dorothy Blair came from
well-to-do, prominent families.
Evelyn was from Philadelphia and Dorothy from Bozeman,
Montana where her physician father had recently brought the family from
Bridgewater, MA. (There’s a story there, but I couldn’t find it!) Not much is
written about Dorothy, but it appears that Evelyn was quite active at Bryn
Mawr. She was both Vice President and Treasurer in her senior year while
serving as editor for the school paper, The
Lantern. In addition, she also wrote for The Sportswoman, the first periodical devoted exclusively to women’s
athletics.
After working at the publisher for several years, the
women must have felt they could be successful as authors, because in 1929 they
left their jobs and created the name Roger Scarlett. The following year, the
first of their five “puzzle box” mysteries was published. Set in Boston, as is
the entire series, The Beacon Hill
Murders is about the murder of a member of the nouveau riche, Frederick
Sutton. The protagonist, the intelligent Inspector Kane, does not have the
usual accoutrements of the typical Golden Age detectives such as a waxed
mustache or walking cane.
Scarlett’s works have been compared to those of S.S.
Van Dine and Ellery Queen and have recently been reprinted by Coachwhip. In
addition to their popularity in the States, the books also garnered a following
in Japan. Disappointingly only five novels were published before Roger
disappeared into obscurity.
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