The Groote Park Murder
Detective Club Crime Classics
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Narrated by:
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Crawford Logan
From a murder in South Africa to the tracking down of a master criminal in northern Scotland, this is a true classic of Golden Age detective fiction by one of its most accomplished champions.
When a signalman discovers a mutilated body inside a railway tunnel near Groote Park, it seems to be a straightforward case of a man struck by a passing train. But Inspector Vandam of the Middeldorp police isn’t satisfied that Albert Smith’s death was accidental, and he sets out to prove foul play in a baffling mystery which crosses continents from deepest South Africa to the wilds of northern Scotland, where an almost identical crime appears to have been perpetrated.
The Groote Park Murder was the last of Freeman Wills Crofts’ stand-alone crime novels, foreshadowing his iconic Inspector French series and helping to cement his reputation (according to his publishers) as ‘the greatest and most popular detective writer in the world’. Like The Cask, The Ponson Case and The Pit-Prop Syndicate before it, here were a delightfully ingenious plot, impeccable handling of detail and an overwhelming surprise ‘curtain’ from a masterful crime writer on the cusp of global success.
This Detective Club classic is introduced with an essay by Freeman Wills Crofts, unseen since 1937, about The Writing of a Detective Novel.
©2019 Freeman Wills Crofts (P)2019 HarperCollins PublishersListeners also enjoyed...
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Classic mystery.
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this story leads you on a chase from south Africa to the highlands of Scotland.
a great intrigue
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Croft provides just the right amount of scene setting that you can picture places and action, but not so much you feel that it weighs the story down. in fact there are very few sentences that are not connected to the tale the book never drags.
The narration is great as well giving each character their personality, but never jarring or over the top.
I great story and listen. Croft may not be as well known as Christie or Sayers, but he has every right to be included.
deceptively simple story will keep you engaged
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ENJOYABLE
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In the second half, entitled “Scotland”, everything changes. We get yards of bucolic description; characters interact more deeply; there are even occasional flashes of humor. A new, more inventive detective takes up the trail, and while he follows procedures too, we also get a cliffhanger, life-and-death rescue. Are some plot turns predictable? One or two, certainly. A stock phrase that P. G. Wodehouse made fun of, the heroine’s anguished, “Oh, if I had only known!” makes its appearance too, though it’s spoken by a man. And yet I kept listening.
Why? The story. As Raymond Chandler wrote, Crofts was “the soundest builder of them all”. Chandler’s addendum, “when he doesn’t get too fancy” really doesn’t apply here; admittedly, there are more train timetables than is convenient in an audiobook, but that’s not Crofts’ fault; he was writing for readers who could flip back a couple of pages. I just enjoyed the story. And, if humor really isn’t there, the two other things for which we turn to Golden Age detective fiction are: a terrific surprise (at least to me) ending, and the pleasure of seeing justice done. And Crawford Logan is about as spot-on perfect as Gordon Griffin.
The Soundest Builder of Them All
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