Reginald Fortune, a medical doctor and special advisor to Scotland Yard, does not like to be manipulated. So when he feels that someone is trying to manipulate his interpretation of some sinister events, he is extremely unhappy. And when Reggie Fortune is unhappy, he can make things very unpleasant indeed for the criminal minds trying to mislead him.
In a nutshell that's what happens in H. C. Bailey's "Shadow on the Wall," his first novel about Reggie Fortune, one of the outstanding and most popular detectives of Britain's Golden Age of Detection. It's the book reviewed this week on our Classic Mysteries podcast, and you can listen to the full review here.
Fortune had already appeared in several collections of short stories prior to this novel. This book is a classic, fair-play mystery puzzle, offering the reader the chance to work out, along with Fortune, the reasons why, as he complains, "we're only seeing what's arranged for us and the shadows of the people behind." There are murders, to be sure, and a number of other crimes, all arranged in a fairly-presented and clued plot. It's back in print, thanks to the Rue Morgue Press, and it's a fine way to spend a winter's evening.
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