Mystery
Monday: Patricia McGerr and Puzzle Mysteries
Despite no longer remembered by many readers, Patricia
McGerr wrote seventeen novels (most of them mysteries) and over fifty short
stories. Originally from Falls City, Nebraska, she settled in Lincoln as a
young child with her family. She graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree from
the University of Nebraska, then moved to Washington, DC with her three
sisters. Later she relocated to New York City to attend Columbia University
from which she earned a Masters in Journalism in 1937. Working in public
relations and as an assistant editor for a trade magazine, she wrote stories
and novels on the side.
Her debut puzzle novel, Pick Your Victim, was published in 1947. Puzzle mysteries are a
subgenre of detective fiction where the emphasis is on the “whodunit” rather
than character or theme development. The premise of Pick Your Victim is fascinating. A group of American soldiers are
located at an isolated Arctic base and desperate for diversion. They find a
torn scrap of newspaper from a parcel that tells part of the story of a man who
has been convicted of a murder. The murderer is identified and known by one of
the GIs, however, the victim’s name is missing. The soldiers create a betting
pool and attempt to discover the identity of the victim.
Scholars feel her second novel, The Seven Deadly Sisters, is a “wink and nod” toward her mother and
six sisters, the well-known “Dore sisters” in Lincoln. Another interesting
plot, the story revolves around seven sisters, one of whom as has murdered her
husband, but is not revealed until the end.
Winning the Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine/MWA prize
for her story “Match Point in Berlin” and the Grand Prix de Litterature
Policiere for her novel “Follow, As the Night,” Patricia did not gain as much
commercial success with her books after Pick
Your Victim. She created a series character, Selena Mead, in her later
writings that was optioned by CBS for television, but the show never
materialized.
Patricia playing the part of corpse with a group of fellow Mystery Writers of America members. |
When asked about her writing method, she said, “From
my reading I knew that a classic mystery included a murderer, a victim, and
several suspects. So, I began by assembling the cast of characters. But when I
began to assign roles, it was obvious that only one of them could commit murder,
whereas any of the other ten might be his victim So, reversing the formula, I
named the murdered on page one and centered the mystery around the identity of
the victim.”
Patricia passed away in Bethesda, Maryland in 1985.
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