The Case of the Gilded Fly (A Gervase Fen Mystery)
By (Author) Edmund Crispin
HarperCollins Publishers
Collins Crime Club
3rd March 2018
8th March 2018
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.914
Paperback
256
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 16mm
180g
The very first case for Oxford-based sleuth Gervase Fen, one of the last of the great Golden Age detectives. As inventive as Agatha Christie, as hilarious as P.G. Wodehouse, this is the perfect entry point to discover the delightful detective stories of Edmund Crispin - crime fiction at its quirkiest and best.
A pretty but spiteful young actress with a talent for destroying mens lives is found dead in a college room just yards from the office of the unconventional Oxford don Gervase Fen. Anyone who knew the girl would gladly have shot her, but can Fen discover who did shoot her, and why
Published during the Second World War, The Case of the Gilded Fly introduced English professor and would-be detective Gervase Fen, one of crime fictions most irrepressible and popular sleuths. A classic locked-room mystery filled with witty literary allusions, it was the debut of a new writer who calls himself Edmund Crispin (in reality the choral and film composer Bruce Montgomery), later described by The Times as One of the last exponents of the classical English detective story . . . elegant, literate, and funny.
This Detective Story Club classic is introduced by Douglas G. Greene, who reveals how Montgomerys ambition to emulate John Dickson Carr resulted in a string of successful and distinctive Golden Age detective novels and an invitation from Carr himself to join the exclusive Detection Club.
The Case of the Gilded Fly couldn't be more British if it came packaged with fish and chips New York Sun
One of the last exponents of the classical English detective story elegant, literate, and funny The Times
A classic detective story and a ludicrous literary farce Guardian
Beneath a formidable exterior he had unsuspected depths of frivolity Philip Larkin
Robert Bruce Montgomery was born in Buckinghamshire in 1921, and was a golden age crime writer as well as a successful concert pianist and composer. Under the pseudonym Edmund Crispin, he wrote nine detective novels and forty two short stories, combining farcical situations with literary references and sharply observed characterisation. His professional film scores included the well-known scores for the Carry On series. Montgomery graduated from St. Johns College, Oxford in 1943 and was part of a famous literary circle including Kingsley Amis and Philip Larkin. In addition to his reputation as a leader in the field of mystery genre, he was the regular crime-fiction reviewer for the Sunday Times from 1967 and contributed to many periodicals and newspapers and edited science-fiction anthologies. After the golden years of the 1950s he retired from the limelight to live out a hermetic existence in Totnes in Devonshire until his death in 1978.